• DocumentCode
    41631
  • Title

    Photon Information Efficient Communication Through Atmospheric Turbulence—Part II: Bounds on Ergodic Classical and Private Capacities

  • Author

    Chandrasekaran, Nivedita ; Shapiro, Jeffrey H. ; Ligong Wang

  • Author_Institution
    Res. Lab. of Electron., Massachusetts Inst. of Technol., Cambridge, MA, USA
  • Volume
    32
  • Issue
    6
  • fYear
    2014
  • fDate
    15-Mar-14
  • Firstpage
    1088
  • Lastpage
    1097
  • Abstract
    Vacuum-propagation optical communication with high photon efficiency (many bits/photon) and high spectral efficiency (many bits/s ·Hz) requires operation in the near-field power transfer regime with a large number of spatial modes. For terrestrial propagation paths, however, the effects of atmospheric turbulence must be factored into the photon and spectral efficiency assessments. In Part I of this study [N. Chandrasekaran and J. H. Shapiro, “Photon Information Efficient Communication Through Atmospheric Turbulence-Part I: Channel Model and Propagation Statistics,” J. Lightw. Technol., vol. 32, no. 6, pp. 1075-1087, Mar. 2014], modal-transmissivity statistics were derived for the turbulent channel that depend solely on the mutual coherence function of the atmospheric Green´s function, and these bounds were evaluated for ~ 200 spatial-mode systems whose transmitters used either focused-beam (FB), Hermite-Gaussian (HG), or Laguerre-Gaussian (LG) modes and whose receivers either did or did not employ adaptive optics. This Part II paper derives upper and lower bounds for the ergodic Holevo capacities of classical and private information transmission over the multiple spatial-mode turbulent channel that can be evaluated from Part I´s transmissivity statistics. Also included are bounds on the ergodic capacity for on-off keying encoding and direct detection. It is shown that: 1) adaptive optics are not necessary to realize high photon information efficiency and high spectral efficiency simultaneously; 2) an FB-mode system with perfect adaptive optics outperforms its HG-mode and LG-mode counterparts; and 3) the converse is true when adaptive optics are not employed.
  • Keywords
    Green´s function methods; adaptive optics; amplitude shift keying; atmospheric light propagation; atmospheric turbulence; channel coding; optical communication; optical signal detection; statistical analysis; FB-mode system; HG-mode; Hermite-Gaussian mode; LG-mode; Laguerre-Gaussian modes; adaptive optics; atmospheric Green´s function; atmospheric turbulence; direct detection; ergodic Holevo capacity; ergodic classical capacity; focused-beam mode; high photon efficiency; high photon information efficiency; high spectral efficiency assessment; lower bounds; modal-transmissivity statistics; multiple spatial-mode turbulent channel; mutual coherence function; near-field power transfer regime; on-off keying encoding; photon information efficient communication; private capacity; private information transmission; receivers; spatial modes; spatial-mode systems; terrestrial propagation paths; transmitters; upper bounds; vacuum-propagation optical communication; Adaptive optics; Channel capacity; Eigenvalues and eigenfunctions; Optical fiber communication; Optical transmitters; Photonics; Receivers; Atmospheric turbulence; ergodic capacity; free-space optical communications; photon efficiency; private capacity; spectral efficiency;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Lightwave Technology, Journal of
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0733-8724
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/JLT.2013.2296853
  • Filename
    6695769