RESUMO
Underwater wireless optical communication (UWOC) has demonstrated high-speed and low-latency properties in clear and coastal ocean water because of the relatively low attenuation 'window' for blue-green wavelengths from 450â nm to 550â nm. However, there are different attenuation coefficients for transmission in ocean water at different wavelengths, and the light transmission more seriously deteriorates with fluctuations in the water turbidity. Therefore, traditional UWOC using a single wavelength or coarse blue-green wavelengths has difficulty tolerating variations in water turbidity. Dense wavelength division multiplexing (WDM) technology provides sufficient communication channels with a narrow wavelength spacing and minimal channel crosstalk. Here, we improve the UWOC in clear and coastal ocean water using dense blue-green WDM. A cost-effective WDM emitter is proposed with directly modulated blue-green laser diodes. Dense wavelength beam combination and collimation are demonstrated in a 20-metre underwater channel from 490â nm to 520â nm. Demultiplexing with a minimum channel spacing of 2â nm is realized by an optical grating. Remarkably, our WDM results demonstrate an aggregate data rate exceeding 10 Gbit/s under diverse water turbidity conditions, with negligible crosstalk observed for each channel. This is the densest WDM implementation with a record channel spacing of 2â nm and the highest channel count for underwater blue-green light communications, providing turbidity-tolerant signal transmission in clear and coastal ocean water.
RESUMO
In this paper, in order to rapidly measure the temperature of a high-temperature target in real time without emissivity data, a high-precision multispectral radiation temperature measurement method based on the improved grey wolf optimization (IGWO) algorithm is proposed. The method can automatically identify the emissivity models of different trends and realize the simultaneous estimation of temperature and emissivity without the emissivity hypothesis model. The IGWO algorithm is applied to the temperature test of a silicon carbide and tungsten material. The temperature test results show that the absolute and relative errors of the silicon carbide (the tungsten) are less than 3 K (4.5 K) and 0.25% (0.18%), respectively. The average time of the algorithm is 0.28 s. The IGWO algorithm can be expected to be applied to some high-precision temperature measurement scenarios.