Patent Publication Number: US-5627668-A

Title: Subcarrier-multiplexed optical transmission systems using optical channel selection

Description:
This is a continuation application of Ser. No. 07/833,574 filed on Feb. 10, 1992, now U.S. Pat. No. 5,537,634. 
    
    
     BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION 
     1. Field of the Invention 
     This invention relates to subcarrier-multiplexed optical transmission systems, and especially to those using optical channel selection. Accordingly, it is a general object of this invention to provide new and improved systems of such character. 
     2. General Background 
     The pertinence of the following references of interest will become more apparent from a reading of the specification. 
     REFERENCES 
     1. L. Kazovsky, &#34;Multichannel coherent optical communications systems&#34;, in Technical Digest, OFC/100C &#39;87, Reno, paper TUG1 (1987). 
     2. H. Toba, K. Inoue and K. Nosu, &#34;A Conceptual Design on optical Frequency-Division-Multiplexing Distribution Systems With Optical Tunable Filters&#34;, IEEE J. Selected Areas in Communications, vol. SAC-4, No. 9, pp. 1459-1467, 1986. 
     3. T. Darcie, &#34;Subcarrier multiplexing for light-wave multiple-access networks&#34;, in Technical Digest, OFC/100C &#39;87, Reno, paper M13, 1987. 
     4. J. C. Simon, &#34;Semiconductor laser amplifier for single mode optical fiber communications&#34;, J. Optical Comm., vol. 4, no. 2, 1983. 
     5. H. Kawaguchi et al., &#34;Experimental verification of optical demultiplexing using a DFB-type LD amplifier&#34;, in Technical Digest, OFC/100C &#39;87, Reno, paper THC5 (1987). 
     6. T. Mukai and Y. Yamamoto, &#34;Gain Frequency, Bandwidth, and Saturation Output Power of AlGaAs DH Laser Amplifiers&#34;, IEEE J. Quantum Electron., vol. QE-17, no. 6, pp. 1028-1034, 1981. 
     7. R. Olshansky et al., &#34;Frequency Response of 18 GHz Vapor Phase Regrown BH Lasers&#34;, in Technical Digest, Tenth IEEE International Semiconductor Laser Conference, Kanazawa, Japan, paper M-2, 1986. 
     8. H. C. Lefevre, &#34;Single-mode fiber fractional wave devices and polarization controllers&#34;, Electron. Lett., vol. 16, pp. 778-780, 1980. 
     9. N. A. Olsson and P. Garbinski, &#34;High-Sensitivity Direct-Detection Receiver with a 1.5 μm Optical Preamplifier&#34;, Electron. Lett., vol. 22, pp. 1114-1116, 1986. 
     10. D. M. Fye, &#34;Practical Limitations on Optical Amplifier Performance&#34;, IEEE J Lightwave Tech., vol LT-2, no. 4, pp. 403-406, 1984. 
     11. T. Saitoh and T. Mukai, &#34;Low-Noise 1.5 μm GainAsP Traveling-Wave Optical Amplifier with High-Saturation Output Power&#34;, in Technical Digest of Post-Deadline Papers, Tenth IEEE International Semiconductor Laser Conference, Kanazawa, Japan, 1986. 
     12. Application manual for Fabry-Perot Interferometers and Etalons, available from Burleigh Instruments, Inc., Burleigh Park, Fishers, N.Y. 14453. 
     The large bandwidth capacity of optical fiber makes it possible to provide greatly expanded communication services in the subscriber loop. Multichannel coherent transmission [1], wavelength-division multiplexing [2], and subcartier multiplexing [3] are known techniques for transmitting a number of independent information channels on a single optical fiber. Schematic representations of systems using each of these transmission techniques are shown in FIG. 1, and Table I summarizes the advantages and disadvantages of each technique. 
     
                       TABLE I                                                     
______________________________________                                    
ADVANTAGES AND DISADVANTAGES OF                                           
MULTICHANNEL OPTICAL TRANSMISSION                                         
TECHNIQUES FOR SUBSCRIBER LOOP APPLICATIONS                               
                           DIS-                                           
TECHNIQUE  ADVANTAGES      ADVANTAGES                                     
______________________________________                                    
1.  Multichannel                                                          
               Highest receiver                                           
                               Requires narrow                            
    Coherent   sensitivity     linewidth single-                          
    Transmission                                                          
               Narrowest channel                                          
                               longitudinal-mode                          
               spacing         diode lasers for                           
                               transmitter and                            
                               local oscillator                           
                               Present concepts                           
                               call for one                               
                               transmitter laser for                      
                               each information                           
                               channel                                    
                               Requires precise                           
                               control of trans-                          
                               mitter and local                           
                               oscillator laser                           
                               wavelengths                                
                               Difficult to main-                         
                               tain channel spacing                       
                               between multiple                           
                               lasers                                     
2.  Wavelength Does not require                                           
                               Present concepts                           
    Division   narrow-linewidth                                           
                               call for one                               
    Multiplexing                                                          
               lasers          transmitter laser for                      
               Does not require                                           
                               each information                           
               local oscillator                                           
                               channel                                    
               laser in receiver                                          
                               Difficult to                               
               Close channel   maintain                                   
               spacing possible                                           
                               wavelength spacing                         
               with tunable optical                                       
                               between multiple                           
               filter or narrowband                                       
                               lasers                                     
               optical amplifier                                          
               Very simple for systems                                    
               with few widely-spaced                                     
               channels                                                   
3.  Subcarrier More than one   Requires high-                             
    Multiplexing                                                          
               information     bandwidth photo-                           
    with Elec- channel trans-  diode and micro-                           
    tronic     mitted by each  wave amplifier in                          
    Channel    diode laser     receiver                                   
    Selection  Relative channel                                           
                               Requires microwave                         
               spacings fixed  bandpass filter                            
               electronically -                                           
                               or microwave local                         
               no laser wave - oscillator for                             
               length stability                                           
                               channel selection                          
               requirement     Receiver sensitivity                       
               No local oscil- lower than that of                         
               lator laser     baseband direct                            
               required for    detection                                  
               receiver        Requires diode laser                       
                               transmitter with                           
                               high modulation                            
                               bandwidth                                  
                               Useable optical                            
                               modulation depth                           
                               of transmitter                             
                               laser limited by                           
                               laser nonlinearity                         
                               System power                               
                               margin                                     
                               limited by small                           
                               laser modulation                           
                               depth and low                              
                               receiver sensitivity                       
______________________________________                                    
 
    
     OBJECTS AND ADVANTAGES 
     An object of this invention is to provide a new and improved subcarrier-multiplexed optical amplifier system which has a number of important advantages compared to prior art multi-channel transmission systems, The notable advantages of the invention described herein are summarized in Table II. 
     
                                           TABLE II                                
__________________________________________________________________________
ADVANTAGES OF SUBCARRIER-MULTIPLEXED                                      
OPTICAL TRANSMISSION SYSTEMS USING OPTICAL                                
CHANNEL SELECTION                                                         
                          ADVANTAGES OVER                                 
ADVANTAGES OVER                                                           
             ADVANTAGES OVER                                              
                          SUBCARRIER-                                     
MULTICHANNEL WAVELENGTH   MULTIPLEXING WITH                               
COHERENT     DIVISION MULTI-                                              
                          ELECTRONIC CHANNEL                              
TRANSMISSION PLEXING      SELECTION                                       
__________________________________________________________________________
Does not require                                                          
             Allows narrower                                              
                          Uses simple baseband                            
narrow-linewidth                                                          
             channel spacing.                                             
                          receiver with no                                
lasers.      Allows more than                                             
                          microwave components.                           
Does not require                                                          
             one information                                              
                          Optical Amplifier                               
local oscillator                                                          
             channel for each                                             
                          yields receiver                                 
laser in     laser transmitter.                                           
                          sensitivity compara-                            
receiver.                 ble to coherent                                 
Allows more than          transmission.                                   
one information           Optical amplifier                               
channel for each          allows small modu-                              
laser transmitter.        lation depth for                                
More tolerant of          lower signal                                    
laser wavelength          distortion.                                     
drift.                                                                    
__________________________________________________________________________
 
    
     SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION 
     In accordance with one aspect of the invention, a subcarrier-multiplexed optical transmission system includes an optical transmitter, an optical fiber, and an optical receiver. The optical transmitter includes a high-speed diode laser modulated by a plurality of independent information channels carried on separate, appropriately spaced carrier frequencies, and having an output coupled to the optical fiber. The optical receiver includes a narrow-bandpass semiconductor laser optical amplifier having a gain bandwidth smaller than the distances between adjacent carrier frequencies, polarization controlling means between the fiber and the optical amplifier to maximize the gain of the optical amplifier, and a photodetector coupled to the amplifier output. 
     In accordance with certain features, the optical amplifier is a single-longitudinal-mode distributed feedback (DFB) semiconductor laser optical amplifier. Alternatively, the optical amplifier can be of the Fabry-Perot type, where the system further includes a blocking filter between the amplifier output and the photodetector. 
     With another aspect of the invention, a subcarrier-multiplexed optical transmission system includes an optical transmitter, an optical fiber, and an optical receiver. The transmitter includes a high-speed diode laser having an optical carrier corresponding to an unmodulated longitudinal mode thereof. The laser is coupled to be modulated by a number of independent information channels carried on separate, appropriately spaced carrier frequencies. The fiber is coupled to the laser diode output. The receiver includes a wide bandwidth, &#34;traveling wave&#34;, optical amplifier. The optical fiber is coupled to the input of the amplifier. The receiver further includes a tunable narrow-band optical filter, coupled to the output of the amplifier, for rejecting the optical carrier corresponding to the unmodulated longitudinal mode of the transmitter laser, a photodetector, and a blocking filter between the narrowband optical filter and the photodetector. The blocking filter prevents spurious signals from reaching the photodetector. 
     In accordance with other aspects of the invention, a method of wavelength selection in a microwave subcarrier-multiplexed optical transmission system includes tuning a narrow bandwidth optical amplifier; and a wavelength-selective element for use in a microwave subcarrier-multiplexed optical transmission system includes a narrow bandwidth tunable optical amplifier. 
    
    
     BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING 
     Other objects, advantages, and features of this invention, together with its construction and mode of operation, will become more apparent from a reading of the following description, when read in conjunction with the accompanying drawing, in which: 
     FIG. 1(a) is a block diagram of a multichannel coherent transmission system of the prior art; 
     FIG. 1(b) is a block diagram of a tunable wavelength division multiplex transmission system of the prior art; 
     FIG. 1(c) is a block diagram of a subcarrier multiplexed optical transmission system with electronic channel selection of the prior art; 
     FIG. 2 is a block diagram of a subcarrier-multiplexed optical transmission system using optical channel selection, in accordance with one embodiment of the invention; 
     FIGS. 3(a), 3(b), 3(c), and 3(d) illustrate spectral characteristics of optical components in the embodiment shown in FIG. 2, namely, laser, Fabry-Perot amplifier, blocking filter, and photodetector, respectively; 
     FIG. 4 is a block diagram of a subcarrier-multiplexed optical transmission system using optical channel selection, in accordance with another embodiment of the invention; and 
     FIGS. 5(a), 5(b), 5(c), 5(d), and 5(e) illustrate spectral characteristics of optical components in the embodiment shown in FIG. 4, namely, laser, traveling wave amplifier, tunable filter, blocking filter, and photodetector, respectively. 
    
    
     DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS 
     One embodiment 20 of the invention is illustrated in FIG. 2. A high-speed diode laser 21 is coupled to be modulated by a number of independent information channels carried on separate, appropriately spaced carrier frequencies. A Fabry-Perot or distributed feedback semiconductor laser optical amplifier 22 (such as taught in references 4, 5, supra) is designed and biased to provide narrow gain passband sufficient to select any one of the sub-carrier-multiplexed information channels and reject the wavelengths corresponding to the laser longitudinal mode(s). The wavelength of the amplifier 22 gain peak can be tuned to any of the subcarrier channels by varying the amplifier base current and/or temperature, whereby the optical amplifier 22 acts as a frequency selective element in a subcarrier-multiplexed transmission system 20. 
     Amplifier passband widths of less than 2 GHz have been demonstrated [6], whereby several independent subcarriers can be accommodated by using a laser with a multigigahertz modulation bandwidth. Diode lasers with modulation bandwidths exceeding 18 GHz have been demonstrated [7], and further improvements are expected to extend modulation bandwidths to greater than 20 GHz. The number of channels that can be transmitted, using a single subcarrier-multiplexed diode laser transmitter, increases with increasing diode laser modulation bandwidth and decreasing optical amplifier passband width. 
     As the optical amplifier 22 is designed to have a passband which is sufficiently narrow to reject the (unmodulated) laser longitudinal mode wavelengths, the signal incident on the photodetector 23 contains only baseband information. Unlike standard subcarrier-multiplexed transmission systems, a high speed photodetector is not needed and the required photodetector bandwidth is the same as that of a simple baseband intensity-modulated transmission system. The optical amplifier 22 can provide over 20 dB of gain, so the receiver sensitivity of the subcarrier-modulated system 20 described herein can approach that of a coherent communication system. 
     As shown in FIG. 2, the electrical input to the high frequency diode laser is provided by channel #1 baseband signal at a frequency f 1 , by channel #2 baseband signal at a frequency f 2 , etc. The output of the diode laser 21 is coupled via an optical fiber link 24, past a polarization controller 26, to the narrowband tunable optical amplifier 22. The output of the amplifier 22 is directed to the photodetector 23, via a blocking filter 27. A representative diagram of the optical emission spectra from the diode laser and the spectral characteristics of the optical components in the system 20 are shown in FIG. 3. The function of each system component is detailed below: 
     1. Subcarrier-Multiplexed Diode Laser Transmitter 
     The system 20 requires a diode laser 21 with a multigigahertz modulation bandwidth. Such devices have room-temperature bandwidths approaching 20 GHz. The system 20 operates most efficiently with a laser 21 emitting a single longitudinal mode, such as a distributed feedback laser. Simple Fabry-Perot lasers emitting more than one longitudinal mode can also be used in this system 20. The diode laser 21 is modulated by microwave subcarriers spaced at minimum intervals on the order of 2 GHz. The minimum subcarrier spacing is determined by the selectivity of the tunable optical amplifier 22. Each of the subcarriers is modulated by an independent baseband information signal. The output spectrum of the subcarrier-modulated diode laser 21 is shown in FIG. 3(a). Each of the laser longitudinal modes has an associated upper and lower sideband corresponding to each of the modulated subcarriers. The number of independently modulated optical subcarriers that can be transmitted by a single diode laser increases with increasing diode laser modulation bandwidth. 
     2. Polarization Controller 
     The optical gain and passband wavelength of the optical amplifier 22 change as a function of the polarization of the input light signal. A polarization controller 26 is therefore provided in front of the optical amplifier 22. The polarization controller 26 is used to adjust the polarization of the input signal to maximize gain in the optical amplifier. Several different types of polarization controllers which are suitable for this purpose have been reported [8]. 
     3. Narrow-Bandpass Semiconductor Laser Optical Amplifier 
     The subcarrier-multiplexed optical signal from the diode laser 21 is coupled into the optical fiber 24, which carries the signal to a narrow bandpass wavelength-tunable semiconductor laser optical amplifier 22 at the receiving end of the link. The optical amplifier 22 consists of either a Fabry-Perot or distributed feedback (DFB) semiconductor laser biased by a drive current which does not exceed the lasing threshold current. The drive current is set to be sufficiently high to provide substantial optical gain between the front (input) and rear (output) facets of the amplifier 22. Optical gains of over 20 dB have been demonstrated with Fabry-Perot optical amplifiers [9]. 
     The form of the gain versus wavelength characteristics for a Fabry-Perot optical amplifier is shown in FIG. 3(b). The amplifier 22 exhibits multiple gain peaks spaced at wavelength intervals of  2  /2nd, where is the transmission wavelength, n is the equivalent refractive index of the optical amplifier active layer, and d is the length from the front to the rear facets of the optical amplifier 22. An optical amplifier based on a DFB laser structure exhibits only one gain peak. Increasing the amplifier bias current increases the peak gain while narrowing the gain bandwidth. For a given value of peak optical gain, the gain bandwidth of a Fabry-Perot optical amplifier can be reduced by increasing the length of the amplifier and/or by increasing the reflectivity of the amplifier facets through the application of appropriate dielectric coatings. The spacing between the optical subcarriers transmitted by the laser 21 is greater than the gain bandwidth of the optical amplifier 22. The amplifier 22 drive current, length, and facet reflectivities can be adjusted to yield a gain bandwidth which is less than approximately 2 GHz, so that multiple optical subcarriers can be accommodated by a system 20 which uses a diode laser 21 with a multigigahertz modulation bandwidth. 
     The wavelength of the optical amplifier 22 gain peak can be readily tuned to correspond to a desired subcarrier wavelength by changing the amplifier 22 drive current and/or temperature. Changing the drive current changes the carrier density in the active layer, which tunes the amplifier 22 resonance due to the carrier-induced change in the effective refractive index of the amplifier active layer. Both Fabry-Perot and DFB optical amplifiers can be tuned by this method. A recent experiment with a DFB optical amplifier reported a tuning sensitivity of 4.5 GHz/mA toward shorter wavelength as the amplifier drive current was increased [5]. 
     Changing the drive current also changes the gain of the amplifier 22. When the amplifier gain remains sufficiently high for operation in the signal-spontaneous beat noise limit, changes in gain do not effect the receiver sensitivity [10]. 
     The temperature of the amplifier should be carefully controlled to stabilize the wavelength of the gain peak. The peak gain wavelength of an InGaAsP/InP Fabry-Perot optical amplifier changes by about 0.05 nm/° C. (10 GHz/° C.) at a nominal operating wavelength of 1.3 μm. When the amplifier is designed to have a bandwidth of 1 GHz, the temperature difference between the diode laser transmitter and the optical amplifier is controlled with an accuracy on the order of 0.1° C. Such temperature stability is readily obtained by mounting the diode laser 21 transmitter and, optical amplifier 22 in packages that incorporate Peltier effect thermoelectric coolers. Temperature tuning can be used in conjunction with current tuning for channel selection in the subcarrier-multiplexed optical transmission system proposed herein. 
     4. Blocking Filter 
     When the optical amplifier 22 is of the Fabry-Perot type, a narrow bandpass optical blocking filter 27 is placed in the optical path between the optical amplifier 22 and the receiver photodetector 23. An idealization of the blocking filter 27 optical characteristics is shown in FIG. 3(c). The blocking filter 27 has a passband which is less than the wavelength spacing between the amplifier Fabry-Perot modes, so that signals amplified by only one of the Fabry-Perot amplifier gain peaks reaches the photodetector 23. By blocking all but one Fabry-Perot mode, the blocking filter 27 reduces the spontaneous-spontaneous beat noise at the receiver [10]. When a Fabry-Perot laser is used in the transmitter, the blocking filter 27 also prevents all but one of the transmitter longitudinal modes from being amplified and coupled to the photodetector 23. The blocking filter 27 can be a multilayer dielectric or metal-dielectric interference filter, or it can consist of a suitable diffraction grating configuration. The blocking filter 2157 is not required when the optical amplifier 22 is a single-longitudinal-mode DFB laser structure. Note that the gain of the optical amplifier 22 provides significant optical losses to be tolerated in the blocking filter 27 without degrading the receiver signal-to-noise ratio [10]. 
     5. Photodetector 
     The photodetector 23 used in the optical receiver responds to the optical emission wavelength produced by the transmitter laser 21. An InGaAs/InP PIN photodiode is preferred for a 1.3 or 1.5 μm transmission system using an InGaAsP/InP diode laser transmitter. An important feature of this invention is that the response speed of the photodiode 23 need be no higher than that of the baseband signals that are applied to the microwave subcarriers. As shown in FIG. 3(d), the optical carrier corresponding to the unmodulated longitudinal mode of the laser 21 is rejected by the narrowband optical amplifier 22 and does not mix with the optical subcarriers to produce microwave frequency photodetector currents. This is a significant advantage over previous subcarrier-multiplexed fiber optic transmission systems that require the use of high speed photodiodes having detection bandwidths exceeding the frequency of the highest microwave subcarrier. 
     6. Receiver 
     The receiver used in this subcarrier-multiplexed system is a standard baseband receiver identical to that which would be used for a single channel direct detection transmission system. Unlike previously reported subcarrier-multiplexed optical transmission systems [3], the receiver does not require a microwave local oscillator or a series of microwave filters to select one of the subcarrier-multiplexed information channels. Using a simple direct-detection baseband receiver, the gain of the tunable narrowband optical amplifier 22 permits the receiver sensitivity of this subcarrier-multiplexed transmission system to approach that of an amplitude-shift-keyed optical coherent transmission system. The system described herein is simpler than an optical coherent transmission system of the prior art because it does not require narrow-linewidth single-longitudinal mode diode lasers for the optical transmitter and local oscillator laser in the receiver. 
     A block diagram of the second embodiment of the subcarrier-multiplexed transmission system is shown in FIG. 4. The transmitter, polarization controller 26, photodetector 23 and receiver are of the same type as described above. A wide-bandwidth traveling wave optical amplifier 31 followed by a tunable narrowband optical filter 32 are substituted for the narrowbandwidth tunable optical amplifier 22 used in the first embodiment. A representative diagram of the optical emission spectra from the diode laser and the spectral characteristics of the optical components in the second novel system embodiment are shown in FIGS. 5a-e. Descriptions of these components are given below. 
     1. Wide Bandwidth Optical Amplifier 
     A wide bandwidth (or so-called &#34;traveling wave&#34;) optical amplifier 31 amplifies the subcarrier-multiplexed optical signal. The traveling wave optical amplifier is similar in structure to the Fabry-Perot optical amplifier described above, with the exception that dielectric antireflection (AR) coatings are applied to both of the amplifier facets. The AR coatings suppress the Fabry-Perot mode structure of the amplifier gain characteristics and make the amplifier gain nearly independent of the input signal wavelength (FIG. 5b). Traveling wave optical amplifiers with AR-coated facets have been fabricated from InGaAsP/InP diode lasers, and their characteristics are well-suited for this application [11]. 
     The bias current applied to the optical amplifier 31 is adjusted to yield high optical gain. In this second system embodiment, the amplifier current is fixed and channel selection is accomplished with a separate tunable narrowband optical filter 32 between the amplifier 31 and the detector 23. For best receiver sensitivity, the amplifier 31 gain is set sufficiently high to overcome the optical losses in the narrowband filter 32 so that signal-spontaneous beat noise limited operation is obtained. Separating the gain and channel selection functions permits tuning to be accomplished without changing the gain of the optical amplifier 31 or the passband width of the optical filter 32. 
     The gain of traveling wave optical amplifiers can be made much less sensitive than that of narrowband optical amplifiers to changes in input signal polarization. A polarization controller is necessary only when the characteristics of the narrowband optical filter depend on signal polarization. When a polarization controller is necessary due to the narrowband filter 32 characteristics, placing the polarization controller 26 between the amplifier 31 and the filter 32 has the least impact on the receiver sensitivity. 
     2. Tunable Narrow-Band Optical Filter 
     The tunable optical filter 32 has a bandwidth sufficiently narrow to reject the optical carrier corresponding to the unmodulated longitudinal mode of the transmitter laser 21. The tunable filter 32 bandwidth is no wider than about 2 GHz, so that a single laser with a multigigahertz modulation bandwidth can be used to transmit multiple optical subcarriers. 
     A tunable Fabry-Perot optical filter is suitable for this application. The filter can consist of a Fabry-Perot etalon with mirror spacing that can be tuned by applying a voltage to piezioelectric transducers [12]. A Fabry-Perot tunable optical filter can also be realized by applying mirrors to a material, such as lithium niobate, which has an index of refraction that varies with applied electric field. 
     A representation of the tunable filter spectral characteristics are shown in FIG. 5(c). In operation, the narrowband filter is tuned so that its passband is aligned with one of the microwave subcarriers transmitted by the laser. The filter. selects the desired subcarrier and filters out most of the spontaneous emission from the wideband optical amplifier. 
     3. Blocking Filter 
     The blocking filter 27 used in this system embodiment has a bandwidth which is less than the spacing between the multiple passbands of the tunable optical filter 32. As represented in FIG. 5(d), the blocking filter 27 prevents spurious signals from reaching the photodetector 23, and filters out spontaneous emission which was not blocked by the tunable optical filter 32. 
     Various modifications will suggest themselves to those skilled in the art without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. For example, the following concepts are believed to be expressive of the invention: 
     1. A microwave subcarrier-multiplexed optical transmission system using a narrow bandwidth tunable optical amplifier as a wavelength-selective element. 
     2. A microwave subcarrier-multiplexed optical transmission system using a narrow bandwidth tunable distributed feedback semiconductor laser amplifier as a wavelength-selective element. 
     3. A microwave subcarrier-multiplexed optical transmission system where a plurality of subcarrier-multiplexed information channels are transmitted via a single diode laser, and a narrow bandwidth tunable optical amplifier is used as a wavelength-selective element to select an individual subcarrier-multiplexed information channel. 
     4. A microwave subcarrier-multiplexed optical transmission system having a narrow bandwidth tunable Fabry-Perot semiconductor laser amplifier as a wave-length-selective element. 
     5. A microwave subcarrier-multiplexed optical transmission system having a narrow bandwidth tunable optical amplifier as a wavelength-selective element, where the narrowband optical amplifier is electrically or thermally tuned to amplify a single modulated microwave subcarrier while blocking all others. 
     6. A subcarrier-multiplexed optical transmission system using a narrow bandwidth tunable optical amplifier as a wavelength-selective element where the narrowband optical amplifier converts a modulated microwave subcarrier to a baseband signal at an optical detector. 
     7. A microwave subcarrier-multiplexed optical transmission system having a wideband traveling wave semiconductor laser amplifier coupled to a tunable narrowband optical filter as a wavelength-selective element. 
     8. A microwave subcarrier-multiplexed optical transmission system having a plurality of subcarrier-multiplexed information channels transmitted with a single diode laser, and where a wideband traveling wave semiconductor laser amplifier is coupled to a tunable narrowband filter as a wavelength-selective element to select an individual subcarrier-multiplexed information channel. 
     9. A microwave subcarrier-multiplexed optical transmission system having a wideband traveling wave semiconductor laser amplifier coupled to a tunable narrowband optical filter as a wavelength-selective element, where the narrowband optical filter is electrically or thermally tuned to select a single modulated microwave subcarrier while blocking all others. 
     10. A microwave subcarrier-multiplexed optical transmission system using a wideband traveling wave semiconductor laser amplifier coupled to a tunable narrowband optical filter as a wavelength-selective element, where the narrowband optical filter converts a modulated microwave subcarrier to a baseband signal at an optical detector.