Patent Abstract:
Method and apparatus for synchronizing two different types of modulators in an optical transmission system includes a first modulator generating an optical pulse train, a second modulator encoding data onto the optical pulse train, an optical filter resolving upper and lower modulation sidebands of the optical data and an analyzer measuring the optical power of modulation sidebands and converting the received optical power of the sidebands into a control signal for synchronizing the two modulators. A wedged etalon is the filter element selecting the USB and LSB from the optical data spectrum. The analyzer contains photo-detectors measuring the optical power of the filtered USB and LSB and an electronic differential amplifier producing a control signal based upon photo-detector output. The phase shifter, in response to said control signal, adapts the temporal delay of the first modulator to reduce differences between the power levels of said upper and lower sidebands.

Full Description:
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS  
       [0001]    This application claims benefit of United States provisional patent application serial No. 60/353,628, filed Feb. 1, 2002, which is herein incorporated by reference. 
     
    
     
       FIELD OF INVENTION  
         [0002]    This invention generally relates to optical data transmission systems. More specifically, the invention relates to improvements in synchronizing the operation of an optical pulse carver and an electroabsorption data modulator in an optical transmitter for long-haul (LH) and ultralong-haul (ULH) transmission.  
         BACKGROUND OF INVENTION  
         [0003]    High bit-rate (LH and/ULH) dense wavelength-division-multiplexing (DWDM) transmission systems require reliable, compact, and economical transmitters. FIG. 1 depicts a typical transmitter  100  for ON-OFF-keying, Return-to-Zero (RZ) transmission and consists of a semiconductor distributedfeedback (DFB) laser  102  followed by a pulse carver modulator (PCM)  104  and an electroabsorption data modulator (EAM)  106 . The order of the EAM and PCM is reversible. The PCM is driven by an electronic clock  108  running at the line rate of the system (10 GHz, for example) and produces a train of RZ pulses from the DFB laser output to act as a carrier for data. A phase shifter  112  is also typically placed between the clock  108  and the PCM  104  to initialize transmitter timing. An electronic data pulse stream to be transmitted (consisting of, for example, a series of square electric pulses representing 1&#39;s and 0&#39;s of binary data D from data module  110 ) modulates the optical transmission of the EAM, and the data is encoded into an optical pulse train. The final output of the two modulators is an optically modulated data pulse train.  
           [0004]    Two problems associated with such transmitters are maintaining the stringent requirements of the output wavelength and power stability and maintaining the correct timing between the two modulators for the pulse carving and data modulation. Temperature fluctuation in the field and the aging of the electronic devices cause the RF group delays of the drive circuits of the modulators to drift, resulting in timing misalignment. This timing misalignment increases the penalties in the data transmission and needs to be addressed for optimal performance of the optical communication systems. For example, one aspect of the penalties that may arise in system  100  is seen by inspection of the graphs shown in FIGS.  2 A- 2 D. FIG. 2A depicts a case in which the optical pulse from the PCM enters the EAM too early and leads the data pulse. In such a circumstance, a positive chirp is introduced into the data (a change in frequency Δω and as seen by the dotted line above the data and timing curves in FIG. 2A). The spectral analysis of the timing conditions of FIG. 2A is shown in FIG. 2B wherein a center frequency (CF) is flanked by asymmetrical lower sideband (LSB) and upper sideband (USB). The reverse conditions (wherein the optical pulse lags behind the data pulse is seen in FIG. 2C. In this condition, spectral analysis (as shown in FIG. 2D) reveals that the asymmetry of the upper and lower sidebands still exists, but is reversed from the previous condition. In an optimal and desired condition, the data pulse and the pulsed optical output of the PCM share a common center point with respect to time (denoted by (x) in FIGS. 2A and C). In such a condition, chirp is minimized and the spectral analysis reveals symmetrical upper and lower sideband modulation levels. The timing drift in real devices tends to be random and thus the optical data will suffer from random chirping without an active management of the timing between the PCM and EAM.  
           [0005]    Therefore, it is desired to have an apparatus for LH and ULH DWDM transmission that is capable of synchronizing the pulse carver modulator and electroabsorption data modulator and a concomitant method for establishing such operational conditions.  
         SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION  
         [0006]    The present invention provides an apparatus for the synchronization of a pulse carver modulator and electroabsorption data modulator used in an optical transmitter for optical telecommunication. It includes a first, pulse carver modulator to generate a RZ optical pulse train, a second, electroabsorption modulator to encode the data onto the optical pulse train, an optical filter to resolve upper and lower modulation sidebands of the RZ optical data, and an analyzer to measure the relative optical power of the two modulation side bands and convert the received optical power of the sidebands into a control signal for synchronizing the two modulators. The present invention also includes a voltage-controlled phase shifter to control the relative timing between the pulse carver modulator and electroabsorption modulator via the control signal and optical power splitters to tap a portion of the optical data into at least two portions.  
           [0007]    In one embodiment of the invention, a semiconductor DFB laser is used and a Lithium Niobate amplitude modulator is used for pulse carving. A wedged etalon is used as a filter element to select the USB and LSB from the spectrum of the optical data. The filter is slightly wedged such that the thickness varies linearly along its cross-section and the transmission frequency changes accordingly. The analyzer contains two substantially identical photo-detectors to measure the optical power of the filtered USB and LSB. An electronic differential amplifier takes the signal from the two photo-detectors and produces a control signal proportional to the difference of the powers of USB and LSB. The phase shifter, in response to said control signal, adapts the temporal delay of the electronic drive of the pulse carver modulator in a manner that reduces differences between the relative power levels of said upper and lower sidebands.  
           [0008]    The invention also includes a method for synchronizing pulses from an optical carver and a data modulator that has steps of providing a data bearing optical signal in response to a sequence of optical signal carrier pulses and data pulses, determining at least a relative signal strength of upper and lower modulation sidebands associated with the data bearing optical signal and in response to the determined relative signal strength, adapting the sequence of optical signal carrier pulses in a manner tending to reduce differences between the signal strength of the upper and lower modulation sidebands. In one embodiment, the determining step includes splitting the data bearing optical signal into a plurality of optical signal portions, passing at least two of the optical signal portions through a filter element to produce filtered optical signal portions having respective center frequencies offset from an initial center frequency of a predetermined amount and detecting a power level of each of the at least two filtered optical signal portions. The adapting step includes applying a control signal to a shifting device for adjusting an optical signal carrier pulse rate, the control signal being indicative of the differences in signal strength between the lower and upper modulation sidebands. 
       
    
    
     BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS  
       [0009]    The teachings of the present invention can be readily understood by considering the following detailed description in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which:  
         [0010]    [0010]FIG. 1 depicts a prior art optical transmitter for optical communication;  
         [0011]    [0011]FIG. 2 depicts instances of temporal misalignment between the pulse carver and data modulation in FIG. 1 and the spectral consequences of such misalignments;  
         [0012]    [0012]FIG. 3 depicts an optical transmitter in accordance with the subject invention;  
         [0013]    [0013]FIG. 4 depicts a graph of timing misalignment vs. power differences of the USB and LSB;  
         [0014]    [0014]FIG. 5 is a detailed view of a filter element of the system of the subject invention;  
         [0015]    [0015]FIG. 6 depicts a series of method steps in accordance with a method of the subject invention for fabricating the filter element;  
         [0016]    [0016]FIG. 7 depicts a series of method steps in accordance with the subject invention for synchronization of a pulse carver and a data modulator; and  
         [0017]    [0017]FIG. 8 depicts a graph of timing offset versus bit error rate, which plots specific results of an experiment conducted with the system of the subject invention. 
     
    
       [0018]    To facilitate understanding, identical reference numerals have been used, where possible, to designate identical elements that are common to the figures.  
       DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION  
       [0019]    [0019]FIG. 3 depicts a system  300  for ultralong-haul dense wavelength division multiplexing (DWDM) transmission of data in an optical environment. The system  300  contains a semiconductor distributed feedback laser (DFB)  302  and a pulse carver modulator (PCM)  304 . In a preferred embodiment, the PCM  304  is a Lithium-Niobate PCM. The optical carrier frequency of the DFB laser is typically a multiple of 50 GHz as set by the industry standard. The PCM  304  is driven by an electronic clock  312  running at the line rate of the communication network and produces a train of Return-to-Zero (RZ) optical carrier pulses from the DFB laser output. An electronic data pulse stream to be transmitted (consisting of, for example, a series of square electric pulses representing 1&#39;s and 0&#39;s of binary data D from data module  310 ) modulates optical transmissions from an electroabsorption modulator (EAM)  306 , and results in the data being encoded into an optical pulse train (TX). The data module  310  and electronic clock  312  are connected such that the data rate (10 Gbits/s, for example ) is identical to the repetition rate (10 GHz, for example) of the optical pulse train produced by the PCM  304 . A phase shifter  326  temporally shifts the clock signal to the PCM  304  and hence controls the timing between the pulse carving in the PCM  304  and data modulation in the EAM  306 . Additionally, data module  310  communicates with the electronic clock  312  via control signals C. Likewise, the electronic clock  312  can send control signals to the data module  310 , thereby allowing for additional communication. For those who are skilled in the art, it should be apparent that several different configurations of the transmitter are possible, where the present invention is still applicable. Examples of such modifications are, but not limited to, replacement of the semiconductor DFB laser by a semiconductor tunable laser, the Lithium-Niobate PCM by a low-chirp EAM pulse carver, or the combination of the DFB laser and the Lithium-Niobate PCM by any low-chirp pulsed laser source, such as a mode-locked fiber laser. Moreover, the order of the PCM  304  and EAM  306  is interchangeable. However, the EAM&#39;s  306  primary task is for data modulation and its operational characteristics are its polarization insensitivity and low drive voltage requirement. Examples of suitable components are JDS Uniphase QF935/208 for the DFB, Lucent X2623C for the PCM and Oki OM5642W-30B for the EAM.  
         [0020]    As discussed earlier, there is a direct correlation between the spectral asymmetry of the optical data pulses and the temporal misalignment between the PCM  304  and EAM  306 . The pulse and data modulation rate is 10 Gbit/s. Specifically, FIG. 4 depicts a graph  400  of timing offset in picoseconds between the PCM  304  and EAM  306  versus the normalized power difference (Δ) in the upper and lower modulation sidebands. More specifically, Δ=((power in +10 GHz sideband)−(power in −10 GHz sideband ))/(power in the carrier). It is easily seen by inspection of graph  400  that as the timing offset increases from 0, the normalized power moves into a more negative regime (and the lower sideband is smaller in intensity than the upper sideband as denoted by the solid curve in the inset graph  402 ). Similarly, as the timing offset decreases from 0, the normalized power increases and a shift in the frequency spectrum occurs resulting in the lower sideband being greater in intensity than the upper sideband (as denoted by the dashed curve in the inset graph  402 ). More specifically, the inset in FIG. 4 depicts the optical spectra (shifted by the optical carrier frequency) of the output TX of the transmitter  300  in FIG. 3 in the case when the pulse carver leads (solid curve) or lags (dashed curve) the EAM  306  by 20 ps.  
         [0021]    The measurement of the relative powers in the upper and lower sidebands requires a filter element  316  with a spectral resolution better than roughly a third of the modulation bandwitdth. The spectral measurement of the modulation sidebands is most easily implemented using a wedged etalon as depicted in FIG. 3. It has no moving parts unlike other filter elements, such as a scanning etalon. A small fraction (˜10%) of the output signal (data-encoded optical pulse train) TX is connected to an optical splitter  314  to create a plurality of transmitted signals TX (e.g., three split signals TX). The split output signals TX are then passed through a wedged etalon filter  316 .  
         [0022]    The details of the wedged etalon filter  316  are depicted in FIG. 5. The filter element  316  (etalon) is a fused silica substrate block  500 . The block consists of two planes, a first plane  502  and a second plane  504 . The second plane  504  is angled with respect to first plane  502 . In one example of the etalon, the angle of the second plane  504  with respect to the first plane  502  is approximately 10 arcsec. The angle is calculated such that the first order modulation sideband frequencies on either side of the center frequency can be viewed over a desired linear spacing shift along the direction of the first plane  502 . In one example of the subject invention, the angle of the etalon is produced in such a manner so as to produce a 10 GHz transmission peak shift over approximately a 2 mm linear direction along first plane  502 . The filter thickness varies linearly along its cross-section. The transmission spectrum of a wedged etalon filter is made up of a comb of periodic transmission peaks with the period of Δf=c/2nt, where c is the speed of light, n is the refractive index of the etalon material, and t is the filter thickness. Thus, different frequencies will be filtered depending on the local thickness at the location at which the light impinges. For example, only the upper side band is transmitted from a top port of the optical splitter  314  while the lower side band is filtered from a bottom port of the optical splitter  314 . The wedged etalon filter  316  is made of fused silica and designed with the thickness t o ˜2 mm at the center of the filter, corresponding to Δf=50 GHz. This is identical to the frequency spacing of the industry standard optical channel spacing (ITU grid). Consequently, the same filter can be used for all possible wavelengths used in the optical communication industry without modification of the design. The wedge angle of 10 arcsec produces a 10 GHz shift of the filter transmission peak for every 2 mm linear displacement of the light input position. Accordingly, in this example of the embodiment, the linear spacing between each of the three samples of the data-encoded optical pulse train TX is 2 mm. As an added benefit of this system  300 , it is realized that the wedged etalon filter  316  can also function as a wavelength locker. More specifically, since the etalon  316  was specifically fabricated for filtering frequencies on the ITU grid, the output intensity from the second plane  504  at the center frequency point can be monitored so as to confirm that the DFB output wavelength is that which is expected for the system.  
         [0023]    The modulation sidebands are analyzed (i.e., amount of power in each sideband is examined) by a spectral analyzer  318  to determine the extent of misalignment and generate correction signals accordingly. The spectral analyzer  318  contains, among other components, a first detector  322   1  and a second detector  322   2 . The first detector  322   1  analyzes the strength of the lower sideband and the second detector  322   2  analyzes the strength of the upper sideband of the output data-encoded optical pulse train TX. In one example of the subject invention, the first and second detectors  322   1  and  322   2 , respectively, are P-I-N diodes that are used to detect the intensity of the lower and upper sidebands, respectively. The diodes convert the optical intensity into a lower sideband voltage signal (LSBV) and an upper sideband voltage signal (USBV). The LSBV and USBV are provided as inputs into a differential amplifier  324  to produce a differential control signal (DS). The differential control signal DS is a value that is indicative of the difference of the lower sideband and upper sideband modulation intensities. Accordingly, the greater the intensity difference between the lower and upper sidebands, the greater the relative shifting of the PCM optical pulse train from the center of the electrical data pulses in the EAM  306 ; hence, the larger the differential control signal DS.  
         [0024]    The differential control signal DS is provided as input to a phase shifter  326 . The phase shifter  326  also receives as input, output signals from the electronic clock  312 . As such, the phase shifter  326  can adjust the temporal phase of the incoming clock signal information based upon the differential control signal DS thereby providing a temporal delay to the drive signal of PCM  304 . As a result, the optical carrier pulse train from PCM  304  is shifted in time relative to the data modulation pulses applied to the EAM. For example, in a situation such as that shown in FIG. 2A (where the optical pulse leads the data pulse), the differential control signal DS will be such that the resultant timing control signals outputted from the phase shifter  326  brings the optical pulse closer to the center of the data pulses (“x” in FIG. 2A). Similarly, in a condition where the optical pulse lags the data pulse, the differential control signal DS will be such that the resultant timing control signals from the phase shifter  326  centers the optical pulses with respect to the data pulses.  
         [0025]    A method for producing the wedged etalon filter  316  is shown as a series of method steps  600  of FIG. 6. Specifically, the method  600  starts at step  602  and proceeds to step  604  where a fused silica substrate block is provided for further processing. The initial substrate is slightly thicker than the target thickness to account for the material loss owing to the etching process to be detailed. Other materials, including silicon, can also be used. At step  606 , the substrate is dipped into an etching solution in a time-controlled manner so as to reduce the thickness of the substrate in a graduated, linear manner. In one particular example, the substrate is silica and is dipped in an HF buffer solution of approximate concentration of 7% at an immersion rate of approximately 3 mm/min. As a result of this time-controlled dipping operation, the block substrate is altered so that two previously parallel planes (e.g., first plane  502  and pre-second plane  504   a ) are now at an angle of 10 arcsec with respect to each other. At step  608 , a reflective coating is applied to first plane  502  and second plane  504 . In particular, and in a specific example, the reflective coating is approximately 80% and the resultant spectral resolution of the filter is 2 GHz, suitable for separating the modulation side bands at ±10 GHz. The method ends at step  610  with the completed etalon filter  316 . One skilled in the art will realize that different angles and thicknesses of a given dispersion element can be formed depending upon system requirements and index of refraction of the initial substrate.  
         [0026]    A method for synchronizing the PCM  304  and the EAM  306  is also disclosed in the subject invention and is specifically shown by the series of method steps  700  of FIG. 7. Specifically, the method starts at step  702  and proceeds to step  704  wherein samples of the data bearing optical pulse train are provided for further inspection and analysis. In one embodiment of the invention, three samples of the optical data are provided. At step  706 , the output spectral characteristics of the optical data pulses are obtained. The output spectrum of the optical data is obtained by, for example, a specially designed etalon, which is capable of filtering the operating frequency of the optical element (laser) and also separating the first order upper and lower sidebands.  
         [0027]    At step  708 , the relative strength of the upper and lower sidebands of the output spectrum are determined. In one example, the relative strength of the upper and lower sidebands is determined by converting the output intensity of these frequencies into electrical signals. At step  710 , a correction signal is generated based upon the sideband information obtained from the determining step  708 . In one example, the electrical signals obtained by converting the intensity of the upper and lower sidebands are used as inputs to a differential amplifier to generate an output amplifier signal. At step  712 , the correction signal is provided to a timing device. In one example of the invention, the output signal generated by the operational amplifier is provided to a RF phase shifter in the system. The phase shifter device alters the timing of the generation of the optical pulse train in the PCM with respect to data pulses so as to center the optical pulses with respect to the data pulses. Successful centering the optical pulses with respect to the data pulses is observed by subsequent monitoring of the upper and lower sidebands of subsequent output data spectrums and observing smaller and smaller correction signals (eventually resulted in a zero value correction signal). The method ends at step  714 .  
         [0028]    In support of the concepts and specific embodiments described herein, an experiment was performed to assess the validity of the subject invention. Specifically, a 64-channel, 10-Gb/s ULH system having the design, construction and operation as described herein was operated under the conditions presented herein. Additionally, the bit-error rate of one of the channels having a transmission path of over 5,000 kilometers was monitored. The result of the experiment are shown in FIG. 8 as depicted by a graph  800 . Specifically, the graph depicts timing offset (in picoseconds) versus the bit error rate (in logarithmic scale). For the desired application of the subject system, it is generally acknowledged that a bit error rate less than 10 −9  is within the accepted bit error rate for transmitting optical signals. Inspection of graph  800  readily indicates that such a bit error rate is easily maintained provided that the timing offset between the PCM and the EAM is kept within a 10 picosecond band around a center point (representing the perfect alignment of the two modulators ).  
         [0029]    Although various embodiments that incorporate the teachings of the present invention have been shown and described in detail herein, those skilled in the art can readily devise many other varied embodiments that still incorporate these teachings.

Technology Classification (CPC): 7