1 November 1992 Wavelength-multiplexed analog fiber optic link for wideband radio-frequency local oscillator signal transmission
D. Kenneth Davies, Anastasios P. Goutzoulis
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
A wavelength-multiplexed fiber optic link architecture has been designed for transmitting ri signals with wide instantaneous band width and LO signals at microwave frequencies over long distances. The architecture involves downconverting the input rf signal, directly amplitude modulating a laser diode, transmitting the resulting rf-modulated optical carrier through single-mode fiber, and subsequently up-converting the recovered rf signal to the original band. Wavelength division multiplexing and demultiplexing is used to transmit the local oscillator signal (required for down- and up-conversions) from the transmitter to the receiver through the same fiber. By using a frequency-divided LO signal in conjunction with frequency multipliers, the wideband rf signal can be down/up-conveiled anywhere in the rf spectrum up to 100 GHz. A demonstration link has been implemented using this architecture and operates from 6.3 to 16 GHz. This link uses a 1.3-μm, 10-GHz rf bandwidth laser diode for IF transmission and a 1.55-μm, 1.5-GHz rf bandwidth laser diode for LO transmission.
D. Kenneth Davies and Anastasios P. Goutzoulis "Wavelength-multiplexed analog fiber optic link for wideband radio-frequency local oscillator signal transmission," Optical Engineering 31(11), (1 November 1992). https://doi.org/10.1117/12.59947
Published: 1 November 1992
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CITATIONS
Cited by 4 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Signal to noise ratio

Fiber optics

Modulation

Receivers

Optical amplifiers

Analog electronics

Signal detection

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