free space optical communication (2)

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Orbital angular momentum modal crosstalk in Bessel-Gauss beams Hunter Rew US Naval Research Laboratory NREIP Intern and College of William and Mary, Williamsburg, VA Mentored by Dr. Abbie T. Watnik US Naval Research Laboratory, Washington, D.C.

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Page 1: Free space optical communication (2)

Orbital angular momentum modal crosstalk in Bessel-Gauss beams

Hunter RewUS Naval Research Laboratory NREIP Intern and College of William and Mary, Williamsburg, VA

Mentored by Dr. Abbie T. WatnikUS Naval Research Laboratory, Washington, D.C.

Page 2: Free space optical communication (2)

Communicating with Light

● Orbital angular momentum is the information carrier○ A property of optical vortices

● Bessel-Gauss beams are the medium○ Potentially helpful properties

● Turbulence is the enemy○ Mode hopping and crosstalk

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A. Dudley, M. Lavery, M. Padgett, and A. Forbes, "Unraveling Bessel Beams," Opt. Photon. News 24(6), 22-29 (2013).

Page 3: Free space optical communication (2)

Orbital Angular Momentum (OAM) and Optical Vortices

●○ determines mode order (...-1,0,1,2…)○ is the azimuthal coordinate

● A helical phase creates angular momentum

● Propagates as annular rings with a null in the center (vortex)

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Vortex Phase (L = 1)

Vortex Beam (L = 10)

Vortex Phase (L = 10)

Page 4: Free space optical communication (2)

Bessel-Gauss (BG) Beams

● A true Bessel beam self-heals and never diffracts○ requires infinite energy

● BG is a realization of the impossible Bessel beam using axicons

Credit: Egmason[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bessel_beam#/media/File:Bessel_beam_reform.svg]

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Page 5: Free space optical communication (2)

Beam Creation

●○ determines the slope of the axicon○ is the radial coordinate

● BG beams are created with a spiraled axicon phase map

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Vortex Phase Axicon Phase Bessel Vortex Phase

Page 6: Free space optical communication (2)

Atmospheric Turbulence

● Turbulence results from patches of varying heat and velocity in the air● Refractive index of air varies, inducing phase shifts and aberrations in light

Credit: Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory[https://tasc.llnl.gov/galleries/image-gallery]

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Turbulence Models

● Essentially random numbers● Strength determined by Fried’s parameter

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Vortex Phase Turbulence Phase Map Vortex Phase with Turbulence

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Spatial Light Modulators (SLMs)

● High resolution displays that control the phase and/or intensity of incident light

● Our SLMs are binary and phase only○ Each pixel can be 0 or pi○ Forth Dimension Displays, 1280 x 1024 resolution

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Vortex Phase Tilted Plane WaveVortex Interfered with a Plane

WaveVortex Interfered with a Plane Wave

(Binary)

Page 9: Free space optical communication (2)

Experimental Setup

9M1

M2M3

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Alignment

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Mode Multiplexing

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Vortex Phase (L = 1) Vortex Phase (L = -1) Null

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Mode Multiplexing

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Vortex Phase (L = 10) Vortex Phase (L = -7) Vortex Phase (L = 3)

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Data

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Analysis

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● Fraction of power in on-axis pixel● Normalized to sum to 1

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Analysis with Turbulence

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Influence of Turbulence on Transmission

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Each point is an average of all modes and data runs

10 runs were performed for each turbulence strength, each with a unique, randomly generated, turbulence map

(D/r0)

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Influence of Turbulence on Spread of Power

17(D/r0)

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Future Work

● Further investigation of the effects of turbulence● Larger propagation distance to test the BG beams● Log-polar transformation for mode sorting

A. Dudley, T. Mhlanga, M. Lavery, A. McDonald, F. Roux, M. Padgett, and A. Forbes, "Efficient sorting of Bessel beams," Opt. Express 21, 165-171 (2013).

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Page 19: Free space optical communication (2)

Summary of Accomplishments

● Built table top setup for multiplexing/demultiplexing modes○ Designed SLM mounts for fabrication

● Interfaced SLMs and Camera with MATLAB● Automated data collection and analysis

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Acknowledgements

● ASEE● ONR● NRL● Tim Doster● Ryan Lindle● Abbie Watnik

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Page 21: Free space optical communication (2)

Orbital angular momentum modal crosstalk in Bessel-Gauss beams

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