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Quantum and classical properties of soliton propagation in optical fibers

Posted on:2002-05-25Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:Princeton UniversityCandidate:Krylov, DmitriyFull Text:PDF
GTID:1468390011497583Subject:Engineering
Abstract/Summary:
Quantum and classical aspects of nonlinear optical pulse propagation in optical fibers are studied with the emphasis on temporal solitons. The theoretical and experimental investigation focuses on phenomena that can fundamentally limit transmission and detection of optical signals in fiber-optic communication systems that employ solitons. In transmission experiments the first evidence is presented that a pre-chirped high-order soliton pulse propagating in a low anomalous dispersion optical fiber will irreversibly break up into an ordered train of fundamental (N = 1) solitons. The experimental results confirm previous analytical predictions and show excellent agreement with numerical simulations. This phenomenon presents a fundamental limitation on systems that utilize dispersion-management or pre-chirping of optical pulses, and has to be taken into consideration when designing such systems. The experiments also show that the breakup process can be repeated by cascading two independent breakup stages. Each stage accepts a single input pulse and produces two independent pulses. The stages are cascaded to produce a one-to-four breakup.; Solitons are also shown to be ideally suited for investigating non-classical properties of light. Based on the general quantum theory of optical pulse propagation, a new scheme for generating amplitude-squeezed solitons is designed and implemented in a highly asymmetric fiber Sagnac interferometer. A record reduction of 5.7dB (73%) and, with correction for linear losses, 7.0dB (81%) in photon-number fluctuations below the shot-noise level is measured by direct detection. The same scheme is also shown to generate significant classical noise reduction and is limited by Raman effects in fiber. Such large squeezing levels can be employed in practical fiber optic communication systems to achieve noiseless amplification and better signal to noise ratios in direct detection. The photon number states can also be used in quantum non-demolition measurements and quantum communications. Amplitude squeezing is shown to be present in the normal-dispersion regime where no soliton formation is possible. In this case, a noise reduction of 1.7dB (33%) and, with correction for linear losses, 2.5dB (47%) below the shot-noise level is measured. The dependence of noise behavior on dispersion is investigated both experimentally and theoretically.
Keywords/Search Tags:Optical, Quantum, Fiber, Classical, Soliton, Propagation, Pulse, Noise
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