RESUMO
In this paper, an atmospheric structure constant Cn2 model is proposed for evaluating the channel turbulence degree of atmospheric laser communication. First, we derive a mathematical model for the correlation between the atmospheric coherence length r0, the isoplanatic angle θ0 and Cn2 using the Hufnagel-Valley (HV) turbulence model. Then, we calculate the seven parameters of the HV model with the actual measured r0 and θ0 data as input quantities, so as to draw the Cn2 profile and the θ0 profile. The experimental results show that the fitted average Cn2 contours and single-day Cn2 contours have superior fitting performance compared with our historical data, and the daily correlation coefficient between the single-day computed θ0 contours and the measured θ0 contours is up to 87%. This result verifies the feasibility of the proposed method. The results validate the feasibility of the proposed method and provide a new technical tool for the inversion of turbulence Cn2 profiles.
Assuntos
Comunicação , Meio Ambiente , LasersRESUMO
The temporal characteristics of the free space optical communication (FSOC) turbulence fading channel are essential for analyzing the bit error rate (BER) performances and compiling the rationale of adaptive signal processing algorithms. However, the investigation is still limited since the majority of temporal sequence generation fails to combine the autocorrelation function (ACF) of the FSOC system parameters, and using the simplified formula results in the loss of detailed information for turbulence disturbances. In this paper, considering the ACF of engineering measurable atmospheric parameters, we propose a continuous-time FSOC channel fading sequence generation model that obeys the Gamma-Gamma (G-G) probability density function (PDF). First, under the influence of parameters such as transmission distance, optical wavelength, scintillation index, and atmospheric structural constant, the normalized channel fading models of ACF and PSD are established, and the numerical solution of the time-domain Gaussian correlation sequence is derived. Moreover, the light intensity generation model obeying the time-domain correlation with statistical distribution information is derived after employing the rank mapping, taking into account the association between the G-G PDF parameters and the large and small scales turbulence fading channels. Finally, the Monte Carlo numerical method is used to analyze the performances of the ACF, PDF, and PSD parameters, as well as the temporal characteristics of the generated sequence, and the matching relationships between these parameters and theory, under various turbulence intensities, propagation distances, and transverse wind speeds. Numerical results show that the proposed temporal sequence generation model highly restores the disturbance information in different frequency bands for the turbulence fading channels, and the agreement with the theoretical solution is 0.999. This study presents essential numerical simulation methods for analyzing and evaluating the temporal properties of modulated signals. When sophisticated algorithms are used to handle FSOC signals, our proposed temporal sequence model can provide communication signal experimental sample data generating techniques under various FSOC parameters, which is a crucial theoretical basis for evaluating algorithm performances.
RESUMO
In an all-optical double-hop free-space optical communication system, the outage probability and bit error rate are analyzed using a composite channel. The model involves atmospheric attenuation, atmospheric turbulence, pointing error, and fiber coupling efficiency. Based on analysis of the channel model and amplifier spontaneous emission noise, the outage probability and bit error rate are obtained. For an all-optical double-hop link, fiber coupling efficiency has an important impact on outage probability, especially at relatively short total link length. By compensating for three terms of wavefront distortions, the system outage probability significantly decreases. The communication performance is further improved by optimizing the receiving aperture diameter and beam width.