DocumentCode
1134093
Title
Long distance fiber-optic transmission of C-band microwave signals to and from a satellite antenna
Author
Bowers, John E. ; Chipaloski, A.C. ; Boodaghians, S. ; Carlin, J.W.
Author_Institution
Bell Laboratories, Holmdel, NJ, USA
Volume
5
Issue
12
fYear
1987
fDate
12/1/1987 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
1733
Lastpage
1741
Abstract
We demonstrate here the use of high-speed semiconductor lasers and detectors with low loss optical fiber for the transmission of the 500-MHz C-band microwave signal spectrum to and from a satellite antenna. The optical system has low attenuation and large band, width, so the microwave signals can be transmitted directly at the microwave frequency (4 or 6 GHz) over 20 km of fiber without regeneration or qualization. The optical system introduces ≈ 1 dB or less of degradation for both low spectral density QPSK signals and high spectral density FM video signals present in typical satellite transmission systems. For the video signals, the signal to noise after AM conversion was reduced from 56 to 55 dB. The microwave drive level to the laser must be significantly larger (typically > -10 dBm) than the intensity noise of the laser, yet small enough (typically < 10 dBm) to reduce the intermodulation distortion signals to an acceptable level. The laser bias current must be several times threshold so that the resonance frequency is beyond the frequency band of interest (4-6 GHz in this case). A flat modulation response is then obtained, and the intensity noise and intermodulation levels are low.
Keywords
Microwave communications; Optical fiber communication; Satellite communication, earth terminals; High speed optical techniques; Laser noise; Masers; Microwave antennas; Optical attenuators; Optical distortion; Optical fibers; Satellite antennas; Semiconductor device noise; Transmitting antennas;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Lightwave Technology, Journal of
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0733-8724
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/JLT.1987.1075466
Filename
1075466
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