AI Article Synopsis

  • Optical chaos communication offers security but typically only reacts to attacks, so researchers tested a proactive method for detecting attacks.
  • The study explored how bending a fiber's curvature affects chaos synchronization and bit error rates, finding notable performance degradation.
  • Results indicated that a 10 mm bend in the fiber decreased synchronization and increased error rates, highlighting the attack, while also causing minor power loss that generally goes unnoticed.

Article Abstract

Optical chaos communication has a physical-layer security advantage but defends passively against a malicious attack. Here, we conduct a proof-of-concept experiment of detecting the attack proactively by observing performance degradation in optical chaos communication tapped with fiber bending. Influences of the curvature radius of the bent fiber on a chaos synchronization coefficient and bit error rate are investigated. Results show that the synchronization coefficient decreases from 0.958 to 0.904 and the bit error rate increases from 1.31 × 10 to 1.73 × 10 under a curvature radius of 10 mm, revealing the attack. Bending fiber to this extent leads to a power loss of 1.81%, which is difficult to detect by the optical time-domain reflectometer but causes significant interference to chaos communication due to the concurrent change in the light polarization, jointly decreasing the effective optical injection strength for yielding chaos synchronization.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1364/OL.531762DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

chaos communication
16
optical chaos
12
curvature radius
8
chaos synchronization
8
synchronization coefficient
8
bit error
8
error rate
8
chaos
6
optical
5
experimental demonstration
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!