1 November 1999 Adaptive beam-size control scheme for ground-to-satellite optical communications
Yusuf E. Yenice, Barry G. Evans
Author Affiliations +
Atmospheric turbulence severely degrades the performance of ground-to-satellite optical links. Employment of adaptive optics to enhance ground-to-space optical communication systems has recently been considered and possible benefits have been shown. Uplink scintillation reduction using multiple transmitters is also being considered. What appears to be currently missing in such work is the realization that transmitter beam size is a crucial design parameter and its optimum value changes continuously according to changing turbulence conditions along the propagation path. We emphasize this point and propose a configuration in which the uplink transmitter beam size is controlled in real time in response to measured turbulence parameters to maximize mean intensity and minimize fluctuations on the satellite receiver. The full analytical evaluation is not tractable, but semianalytic simulations can be run to explore the improvement for different scenarios and site conditions. Some preliminary simulation results are presented and the difficulties hindering the achievement of more meaningful results through simulation are discussed. Controlling the beam size, especially by a factor of 2 or so, in relatively long time scales should not be a problem. The technology is sufficient to design an experiment to prove its feasibility.
Yusuf E. Yenice and Barry G. Evans "Adaptive beam-size control scheme for ground-to-satellite optical communications," Optical Engineering 38(11), (1 November 1999). https://doi.org/10.1117/1.602239
Published: 1 November 1999
Lens.org Logo
CITATIONS
Cited by 11 scholarly publications and 2 patents.
Advertisement
Advertisement
RIGHTS & PERMISSIONS
Get copyright permission  Get copyright permission on Copyright Marketplace
KEYWORDS
Turbulence

Scintillation

Adaptive control

Beam controllers

Transmitters

Satellites

Optical communications

Back to Top