We investigated the performance of mode diversity reception of a polarization-division-multiplexed (PDM) signal with few-mode-fiber (FMF) coupling for high-speed free-space optical communications under atmospheric turbulence. Optical propagation through eigenmodes of a FMF yields coupling between different linearly polarized (LP) modes in orthogonal polarizations, which causes power imbalance and loss of the orthogonality of multiplexed signals within each individual LP mode. Due to this phenomenon, the architecture of mode diversity combining affects the receiver performance. We numerically simulated the power fluctuation coupled to each LP mode after atmospheric propagation and FMF propagation in the condition of an optical downlink from a low-Earth-orbital satellite to the ground. We found that full receiver-side multiple-input multiple-output (Rx-MIMO) architecture in three-mode diversity reception improved the performance by 5 dB compared with selection combining (SC) of signals decoded individually in LP modes, and that it mitigated the required transmitted power by 6 dB compared with reception with single mode fiber (SMF) coupling. We also experimentally confirmed in three-mode diversity reception of a 128 Gb/s PDM-quadrature phase-shift keying with a diffuser plate as a turbulence emulator, that full Rx-MIMO with adaptive filters could work under severe fading and that it outperformed SC.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1364/OE.26.028263 | DOI Listing |
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