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FSO Laser Guide
Laser History
Lasers are one of the most significant inventions of the 20th century -
they can be found in many modern products, from CD players to fibre-optic
networks. The word laser is actually an acronym for Light Amplification by
Stimulated Emission of Radiation. Although stimulated emission was first
predicted by Albert Einstein near the beginning of the 20th century, the
first working laser was not demonstrated until 1960 when Theodore Maiman
did so using a ruby. Maiman's laser was predated by the maser - another
acronym, this time for Microwave Amplification by Stimulated Emission of
Radiation. A maser is very similar to a laser except the photons generated
by a maser are of a longer wavelength outside the visible and/or infrared
spectrum.
How a Laser Works
A laser generates light, either visible or infrared, through a process
known as stimulated emission. To understand stimulated emission,
understanding two basic concepts is necessary. The first is absorption
which occurs when an atom absorbs energy or photons. The second is
emission which occurs when an atom emits photons. Emission occurs when an
atom is in an excited or high energy state and returns to a stable or
ground state – when this occurs naturally it is called spontaneous
emission because no outside trigger is required. Stimulated emission
occurs when an already excited atom is bombarded by yet another photon
causing it to release that photon along with the photon which previously
excited it. Photons are particles, or more properly quanta, of light and a
light beam is made up of what can be thought of as a stream of photons.
A basic laser uses a mirrored chamber or cavity to reflect light waves so
they reinforce each other. An excitable substance – gas, liquid, or solid
like the original ruby laser – is contained within the cavity and
determines the wavelength of the resulting laser beam. Through a process
called pumping, energy is introduced to the cavity exciting the atoms
within and causing a population inversion. A population inversion is when
there are more excited atoms than grounded atoms which then leads to
stimulated emission. The released photons oscillate back and forth between
the mirrors of the cavity, building energy and causing other atoms to
release more photons. One of the mirrors allows some of the released
photons to escape the cavity resulting in a laser beam emitting from one
end of the cavity.
Laser Communications History
The first experiments in laser communications were performed by NASA and
the Air Force. One of the early experiments actually utilized Morse code -
a technician simply chopped the beam with his hand to send a coded message
to the remote receiver. The first patents for laser communications were
filed in the 1960's. From this time through the 80's various defence
related organizations experimented with laser communications. Essentially
all of the engineering of today's laser communications systems was done
over the past 40 years or so, mostly for defence applications. By
addressing the principal engineering challenges, this aerospace/defence
activity established a strong foundation upon which today's commercial
optical wireless systems are based. Ground to aircraft, ground to
satellite, satellite to satellite, even satellite to submarine
applications were all experimented with.
Laser safety and Classifications
Laser communications systems can be designed to be eye-safe, which means
that they pose no danger to people who might happen to encounter the
communications beam. Laser eye safety is classified by the International
Electrotechnical Commission (IEC), which is the international standards
body for all fields of electrotechnology. While the IEC is an advisory
agency, its guidelines are adopted by the regulatory agencies in most of
the world’s countries. A laser transmitter that is completely safe when
viewed by the unaided eye is designated IEC Class 1M. In the U.S., laser
eye safety is controlled by the Center for Devices and Radiological Health
(CDRH), a division of the Food and Drug Administration (FDA). Currently,
the CDRH is in the process of adopting the safety classifications of the
IEC.
Note, however, that the eyesafe limits vary with wavelength. The optical
wireless hardware currently on the market can be classified into two broad
categories – systems that operate at a wavelength near 800 nm and those
that operate near 1550 nm. Laser beams at 800 nm are near-infrared and
therefore invisible, yet like visible wavelengths, the light passes
through the cornea and lens and is focused onto a tiny spot on the retina.
This is schematically illustrated in the diagram, which applies for
visible and near-infrared wavelengths in the range of 400 to 1400 nm. The
collimated light beam entering the eye in this retinal-hazard wavelength
region is concentrated by a factor of 100,000 times when it strikes the
retina. Thus, at 800 nm the retina could be permanently damaged by some
commercially available optical-wireless products before the victim is
aware that hazardous illumination has occurred. In contrast, the lower
diagram schematically shows that laser beams at wavelengths greater than
1400 nm are absorbed by the cornea and lens, and do not focus onto the
retina. Because of these biophysical properties of the eye, wavelengths >
1400 nm are allowed approximately 50 times greater intensities than
wavelengths near 800 nm. This fact can be exploited by specifying a
wavelength in the 1550 nm range, where the factor of fifty additional
laser power allows the system to propagate over longer distances and/or
support higher data rates.
Historically, most developers of such systems have employed wavelengths in
the near-visible infrared spectral region (~ 780 nm to ~ 850 nm),
principally because of the availability of efficient and reliable direct
semiconductor diode-based sources at those wavelengths, and, for the 780
nm devices, the cost advantages of utilizing the same wavelength as is
used in CD recorders. While cost is obviously an important factor in the
wavelength trade, one must also consider several additional constraints,
most notably the need not to exceed eye-safe limits on transmitted
intensities under conditions of high data-rate transmissions through heavy
atmospheric attenuation (due to fog, for example). Other important trade
criteria include overall performance, and the potential for system growth
and scalability. When all of these factors are considered, it becomes
clear that a more judicious approach is to employ wavelengths near 1550
nm, the same wavelength range used in commercial fibre-optic
communications networks.
Terrestrial Laser Communications Challenges
Fog
Fog substantially attenuates visible radiation, and it has a similar
affect on the near-infrared wavelengths that are employed in laser
communications. Similar to the case of rain attenuation with RF wireless,
fog attenuation is not a “show-stopper” for optical wireless, because the
optical link can be engineered such that, for a large fraction of the
time, an acceptable power will be received even in the presence of heavy
fog. Laser communication systems can be enhanced to yield even greater
availabilities by combining them with RF systems.
Physical Obstructions
Laser communications systems that employ multiple, spatially diverse
transmitters and large receive optics will eliminate interference concerns
from objects such as birds.
Pointing Stability
Pointing stability in commercial laser communications systems is achieved
by one of two methods. The simpler, less costly method is to widen the
beam divergence so that if either end of the link moves the receiver will
still be within the beam. The second method is to employ a beam tracking
system. While more costly, such systems allow for a tighter beam to be
transmitted allowing for higher security and longer distance
transmissions.
Scintillation
Performance of many laser communications systems is adversely affected by
scintillation on bright sunny days. Through a large aperture receiver,
widely spaced transmitters, finely tuned receive filtering, and automatic
gain control, downtime due to scintillation can be avoided.
To find out more, please visit:
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Copyright
2000 CableFree Solutions Limited
Free Space Optics (FSO), Optical Wireless, Infrared
Fixed Wireless Access,
Wireless
Broadband, Laser
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