During the early 1990s, researchers at the Georgia
Institute of Technology learned to control the chaotic fluctuations
in light intensity produced by certain laser systems. In 1994, Rajarshi
Roy and K. Scott Thornburg of Georgia Tech showed for the first time
that two chaotic lasers could be sychronized. At that time, they suggested
potential communications-related applications for the work.
Subsequently, Quinton Williams and Roy studied erbium doped fiber lasers
and amplifiers with the goal of using them for chaotic communications.
Now, in a report published February 20 in the journal Science,
Roy and collaborator Gregory D. VanWiggeren describe how to use those chaotic
fluctuations to encode information being transmitted from one laser to
another through fiber optic cable.
The work opens up the possibility of using chaotic carrier signals to
hide "private" messages transmitted across existing optical fiber networks.
And by showing that information can be recovered from "noisy" and irregular
signals, the work also challenges assumptions that underlie many forms
of modern communication.
"We have developed a system that allows us to encode information onto
chaos, transmit it, and then decode the information away from the chaos,"
said Roy, who is chair of Georgia Tech's School
of Physics. "In an ordinary digital signal, the message can immediately
be seen. But in our system, digital information is encoded in the chaos,
so the message would not be obvious to a person who may intercept it."
The research was sponsored by the U.S. National
Science Foundation and the U.S. Office
of Naval Research.
Experimental Work & Results Explained
In the experimental system, a square wave "message" signal was produced
by a stable semiconductor diode laser. That signal was then amplified by
an erbium-doped fiber amplifier (EDFA) and introduced into a chaotic signal
produced by an erbium-doped fiber ring laser of the type commonly used
in the communications industry today.
The resulting combined signal, containing a mixture of the message and
chaotic carrier, was transmitted through an optical fiber to a second EDFA
nearly identical to the first. Upon receiving the combined signal, the
receiving EDFA began generating chaotic fluctuations synchronized with
those produced by the transmitting laser. The chaotic portion of the signal,
measured by a digital oscilloscope, was then subtracted from the combined
signal and low pass filtered, recovering the original message to be read
by the recipient.
The semiconductor diode laser and erbium-doped fiber ring lasers used
in the experiment operate at approximately 1.53 micrometers, a wavelength
ideal for fiber transmission.
Similarity of Receiver & Transmitter Important
Roy believes that the sending and receiving EDFA systems must be similar,
though not necessarily identical, in order for the chaotic encoding-decoding
scheme to work.
Experimental system for optical communication with chaotic
lasers.
|
The timing of the signal and other factors such as the lasers' state and
phase must be carefully set in both systems. Thus, a person intercepting
an encoded message with a similar laser could not decode it without knowing
these parameters.
Other researchers have used chaos to mask information in electronic
and hybrid opto-electronic systems, but the work reported in Science
is the first use of chaos to carry messages in an all-optical system. The
optical system provides speed improvements of as much as 100-fold over
the electronic systems, making it attractive for modern communication systems.
The Science paper describes sending signals at a rate of 10 megabits
per second, but Roy and VanWiggeren have since communicated random bits
of information at speeds of up to 150 megabits per second. They see no
theoretical limitation on how fast data could be sent, though the capabilities
of detector equipment impose a practical limit.
Challenges Ahead for Practical Use
Before the chaotic system can be put into practical use, researchers
must further develop the techniques demonstrated -- and verify that they
can be used with longer lengths of fiber. Optical transmission networks
can introduce distortions that may affect the chaotic fluctuations and
hamper recovery of the message signal.
Theoretical analysis and numerical computations developed by researchers
at the University of California at San Diego
and Cornell University are related
to these experiments. In a paper to be published in Physical Review
Letters, collaborators Henry Abarbanel and Matthew Kennel from the
University of California at San Diego suggest that the encoding-decoding
technique should be robust even if the lasers aren't identical -- and there
is noise in the optical fiber.
A New Way to Look at Communication Waveforms
Beyond the potential communications applications, the work also shows
that communication does not have to rely on regular waveforms.
"In science, when we look for information, we usually look for some
kind of analog or digital form of information that is readily recoverable,"
Roy noted. "But we are seeing here that information can be hidden in signals
that look noisy and chaotic. Information can be transmitted and received
with a chaotic waveform instead of the standard sinusoidal waves that have
always been used to carry information in radio or television."
This knowledge may encourage scientists to take a new look at how they
transmit information and could one day lead to a better understanding of
how biological systems such as neurons communicate.
RELATED INFORMATION:
RESEARCH NEWS &
PUBLICATIONS OFFICE
Georgia Institute of Technology
430 Tenth Street, N.W., Suite N-112
Atlanta, Georgia 30318 USA
MEDIA RELATIONS CONTACTS:
John Toon (404-894-6986);
Internet: john.toon@edi.gatech.edu;
FAX: (404-894-1826)
TECHNICAL:
Dr. Rajarshi Roy (404-894-5201);
E-mail: rajarshi.roy@physics.gatech.edu;
FAX: (404-894-9958).
WRITER: John Toon
PHOTO COPYRIGHT INFORMATION: Photographs
are copyrighted by the Georgia Tech Research Corporation and may be freely
used by the news media with credit to the Georgia Institute of Technology.
The photographer is Stanley
Leary, Georgia Tech Communications Division.
Latest News | Research
News | Research Horizons
Georgia Tech Research Institute
| Georgia Tech
Send all questions and comments to Webmaster@gtri.gatech.edu
Last updated: February 23, 1998