Scientific News Physics Quantum physics HIDING IN THE NOISE AND CHAOS
HIDING IN THE NOISE AND CHAOS
Communicating with light
polarization
A new and novel way of communicating over fiber
optics is being developed by physicists supported by the Office of Naval
Research. Rather than using the amplitude and frequency of electromagnetic
waves, they're using the polarization of the wave to carry the signal. Such a
method offers a novel and elegant method of secure communication over fiber
optic lines.
Electromagnetic waves, like light and radio
waves, have amplitude (wave height), frequency (how often the wave crests each
second), and polarization (the plane in which the wave moves). Changes in
amplitude and frequency have long been used to carry information (AM radio uses
changes in the amplitude of radio waves; FM radio uses changes in their
frequency), but polarization has not been so thoroughly explored.
ONR-supported physicists Gregory VanWiggeren
(Georgia Tech) and Rajarshi Roy (University of Maryland) have demonstrated an
ingenious method to communicate through fiber optics by using dynamically
fluctuating states of light polarization. Unlike previous methods, the state of
the light's polarization is not directly used to encode data. Instead the
message (encoded as binary data of the sort used by digital systems) modulates a
special kind of laser light. Van Wiggeren and Roy used an erbium-doped fiber
ring laser. The erbium amplifies the optical signal, and the ring laser
transmits the message. In a ring laser the coherent laser light moves in a
ring-shaped path, but the light can also be split from the ring to be
transmitted through a fiber optic cable.
The nonlinearities of the optic fiber produce
dynamical chaotic variations in the polarization, and the signal is input as a
modulation of this naturally occurring chaos. The signal can be kept small
relative to the background light amplitude. The light beam is then split, with
part of it going through a communications channel to a receiver. The receiver
breaks the transmitted signal into two parts. One of these is delayed by about
239 nanoseconds, the time it takes the signal to circulate once around the ring
laser. The light received directly is compared, by measuring polarizations, to
the time delayed light. Then the chaotic variations are subtracted, which leaves
only the signal behind. Variations in stress and temperature on the
communications would be equally subtracted out.
"This is quite a clever method, which hides
the signal in noise," says ONR science officer Mike Shlesinger, who
oversees the research. "It provides a definite advantage over direct
encoding of polarization, leaving an eavesdropper only chaotic static, and no
means to extract the signal."
###
For more information on the technology, or
to interview Mike Shlesinger and his researchers, please contact John Petrik or
Gail Cleere at 703-696-5031, or email petrikj@onr.navy.mil
or cleereg@onr.navy.mil,
703-696-4987, Office
of Naval Research
Source of the given news and the copyrights
belong to a Office
of Naval Research
Publishing date: August 20, 2002
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