Title: An Optical Receiver for Interplanetary Communications Jeremy Bailey
1An Optical Receiver for Interplanetary
CommunicationsJeremy Bailey
2JPL Concept for Mars Link
(Ortiz et. al. 2000, TMO Prog. Rep. 42-142)
EARTH
MARS
2 AU
10m Telescope
Si APD detector
Laser transmitter Q switched NdYAG Laser
(1064nm) 1W average power 10cm telescope
256-PPM modulation 30 kb/s 646 photons/pulse
3Problems with JPL Scheme
- 30kb/s is comparable to current radio systems
- Sensitivity falls far short of quantum limit
- Problems with analogue APD detection.
- Large detector size required to match telescope.
- Background from daylight sky and Mars.
- 10m telescopes are expensive - and need several
of them. - Operating when Mars is near the Sun impossible.
4Detection Schemes
- Analogue Direct Detection with APDs -
- Measure the output current of the diode with a
low noise preamplifier. - Standard technique in fibre optic communication.
- Limited by thermal noise and excess noise.
- Best performance - 40 photons/bit in ESA SILEX
system - more typically 200 photons per/bit for
Si detectors, gt1000 photons/bit for InGaAs
detectors.
5Coherent Detection
- Mix input signal with local oscillator and detect
at the beat frequency. - Quantum limited performance - e.g. 4.5
photons/bit demonstrated in ESA experiments. - Not suitable for large ground based telescopes.
- Good for space to space systems.
6Photon Counting Detectors
- Essentially noise free provided signal is well
above dark count. - Quantum limited performance (0.4 photons/bit
demonstrated in 256-PPM) - Katz,1982, TDA Prog. Rep. 42-70
- Dead time (50ns) prevents high speed operation.
- Cant detect a narrow pulse.
- Max count rate 107 photons/sec
7Solution - Multiple Photon Counters
1 photon counter
dead time
n photon counters
8Multi-Telescope Telescope
10m effective aperture, made from 25 individual
telescopes mounted together. Each telescope feeds
a photon counter via optical fibres. Individual
telescopes are f/5, matched to fibres.
9Advantages
- Overall telescope is compact.
- No need to make a large mirror.
- No problems matching detector size.
- No need for active control systems.
- Long (f/5) tube assemblies can be baffled to
allow operation within 10 degrees of Sun. - Redundancy.
- Scalable to any size you want.
10Daylight Operation
- Essential for system to be able to operate in
daylight. - To follow Mars throughout its orbit.
- Background from Mars itself will be at daylight
levels. - Need narrow band filter with width 106
- Tunable to follow orbital motion of spacecraft
- Can be achieved by Fabry-Perot and probably other
technologies.
11Performance
- 532nm 1W transmitter at 2AU (3 x 108km)
- 20cm transmission telescope - 0.55 arc sec beam
- 800km beam width at Earth
- Received power in 10m telescope 1.6 x 1010W
- 4.2 x 108 photons/sec
- With 20 efficiency and 5 photons/bit this will
support communication at 16 Mb/s (uncoded). - Receiver with 25 detectors can handle 50 Mb/s
(with more detectors could go up to 500Mb/s)
12Transmitter
RS Encoder
Convolutional Encoder
Polarization Modulated beam
Laser
532nm Nd YAG Laser
Data Input
Electro-optic cell switched between / l/4
Transmitter Telescope
13Receiver Data Processing
Photon arrival times
Photon pulses
Time Series reconstruction
Demodulation
Fibres From telescope
Convolutional decoding
RS Decoding
APD Modules
Photon Timing
Computer System
Data Output
14Conclusions
- An optical communication reciever built around
multiple APD photon counters can provide - Quantum limited operation.
- Data rates 100-1000 times greater than JPLs
concept (and existing radio systems). - Simplification of many large-telescope design
issues. - Scalability to any size telescope.
- Data rates up to 500Mb/s.