Publications by authors named "Daniel Onori"

Precise and agile detection of radio frequency (RF) signals over an ultra-wide frequency range is a key functionality in modern communication, radar, and surveillance systems, as well as for radio astronomy and laboratory testing. However, current microwave solutions are inadequate for achieving the needed high performance in a chip-scale format, with the desired reduced cost, size, weight, and power. Photonics-based technologies have been identified as a potential solution but the need to compensate for the inherent noise of the involved laser sources have prevented on-chip realization of wideband RF signal detection systems.

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We propose and experimentally demonstrate a reconfigurable microwave photonic filter based on temporal Talbot effects. The microwave signal is first uniformly sampled by a train of optical pulses through electro-optic intensity modulation. The sampled optical pulses are then directed to a Talbot-based optical signal processor, consisting of an electro-optic temporal phase modulator and a chromatic dispersion line.

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An innovative and effective architecture for lidar systems is presented and experimentally demonstrated. The proposed scheme can also be easily exploited for optical communications. In particular, the system includes an innovative lidar software-defined architecture based on optically coherent detection, overcoming current drawbacks of time of flight incoherent systems.

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We propose a novel architecture for implementing a dual-frequency lidar (DFL) exploiting differential Doppler shift measurement. The two frequency tones, needed for target velocity measurements, are selected from the spectrum of a mode-locked laser operating in the C-band. The tones' separation is easily controlled by using a programmable wavelength selective switch, thus allowing for a dynamic trade-off among robustness to atmospheric turbulence and sensitivity.

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The next generation of radar (radio detection and ranging) systems needs to be based on software-defined radio to adapt to variable environments, with higher carrier frequencies for smaller antennas and broadened bandwidth for increased resolution. Today's digital microwave components (synthesizers and analogue-to-digital converters) suffer from limited bandwidth with high noise at increasing frequencies, so that fully digital radar systems can work up to only a few gigahertz, and noisy analogue up- and downconversions are necessary for higher frequencies. In contrast, photonics provide high precision and ultrawide bandwidth, allowing both the flexible generation of extremely stable radio-frequency signals with arbitrary waveforms up to millimetre waves, and the detection of such signals and their precise direct digitization without downconversion.

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