518,177 research outputs found
Optical Communication Without Photons
I analyse a recent quantum communication protocol by Salih et al. that allows
one to communicate without any particle carrying the information from the
sender to the receiver. I show how this can equally be achieved using classical
communication.Comment: 2 page
Fiber distributed feedback laser
Utilizing round optical fibers as communication channels in optical communication networks presents the problem of obtaining a high efficiency coupling between the optical fiber and the laser. A laser is made an integral part of the optical fiber channel by either diffusing active material into the optical fiber or surrounding the optical fiber with the active material. Oscillation within the active medium to produce lasing action is established by grating the optical fiber so that distributed feedback occurs
Quantum optical waveform conversion
Currently proposed architectures for long-distance quantum communication rely
on networks of quantum processors connected by optical communications channels
[1,2]. The key resource for such networks is the entanglement of matter-based
quantum systems with quantum optical fields for information transmission. The
optical interaction bandwidth of these material systems is a tiny fraction of
that available for optical communication, and the temporal shape of the quantum
optical output pulse is often poorly suited for long-distance transmission.
Here we demonstrate that nonlinear mixing of a quantum light pulse with a
spectrally tailored classical field can compress the quantum pulse by more than
a factor of 100 and flexibly reshape its temporal waveform, while preserving
all quantum properties, including entanglement. Waveform conversion can be used
with heralded arrays of quantum light emitters to enable quantum communication
at the full data rate of optical telecommunications.Comment: submitte
AlGaInN laser diode technology for GHz high-speed visible light communication through plastic optical fiber and water
AlGaInN ridge waveguide laser diodes are fabricated to achieve single-mode operation with optical powers up to 100 mW at ∼420 nm∼420 nm for visible free-space, underwater, and plastic optical fiber communication. We report high-frequency operation of AlGaInN laser diodes with data transmission up to 2.5 GHz for free-space and underwater communication and up to 1.38 GHz through 10 m of plastic optical fiber
A Comparative Survey of Optical Wireless Technologies: Architectures and Applications
New high-data-rate multimedia services and applications are evolving
continuously and exponentially increasing the demand for wireless capacity of
fifth-generation (5G) and beyond. The existing radio frequency (RF)
communication spectrum is insufficient to meet the demands of future
high-datarate 5G services. Optical wireless communication (OWC), which uses an
ultra-wide range of unregulated spectrum, has emerged as a promising solution
to overcome the RF spectrum crisis. It has attracted growing research interest
worldwide in the last decade for indoor and outdoor applications. OWC offloads
huge data traffic applications from RF networks. A 100 Gb/s data rate has
already been demonstrated through OWC. It offers services indoors as well as
outdoors, and communication distances range from several nm to more than 10000
km. This paper provides a technology overview and a review on optical wireless
technologies, such as visible light communication, light fidelity, optical
camera communication, free space optical communication, and light detection and
ranging. We survey the key technologies for understanding OWC and present
state-of-the-art criteria in aspects, such as classification, spectrum use,
architecture, and applications. The key contribution of this paper is to
clarify the differences among different promising optical wireless technologies
and between these technologies and their corresponding similar existing RF
technologie
Free-space quantum key distribution by rotation-invariant twisted photons
Twisted photons are photons carrying a well-defined nonzero value of orbital
angular momentum (OAM). The associated optical wave exhibits a helical shape of
the wavefront (hence the name) and an optical vortex at the beam axis. The OAM
of light is attracting a growing interest for its potential in photonic
applications ranging from particle manipulation, microscopy and
nanotechnologies, to fundamental tests of quantum mechanics, classical data
multiplexing and quantum communication. Hitherto, however, all results obtained
with optical OAM were limited to laboratory scale. Here we report the
experimental demonstration of a link for free-space quantum communication with
OAM operating over a distance of 210 meters. Our method exploits OAM in
combination with optical polarization to encode the information in
rotation-invariant photonic states, so as to guarantee full independence of the
communication from the local reference frames of the transmitting and receiving
units. In particular, we implement quantum key distribution (QKD), a protocol
exploiting the features of quantum mechanics to guarantee unconditional
security in cryptographic communication, demonstrating error-rate performances
that are fully compatible with real-world application requirements. Our results
extend previous achievements of OAM-based quantum communication by over two
orders of magnitudes in the link scale, providing an important step forward in
achieving the vision of a worldwide quantum network
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