An improved method of measuring chromatic dispersion in an optical fiber or other device affords a lower (relative to prior such methods) limit of measurable dispersion. This method is a modified version of the amplitude-modulation (AM) method, which is one of the prior methods. In comparison with the other prior methods, the AM method is less complex. However, the AM method is limited to dispersion levels >160 ps/nm and cannot be used to measure the symbol of the dispersion. In contrast,the present modified version of the AM method can be used to measure the symbol of the symbol of the dispersion and affords a measurement range from about 2 ps/nm to several thousand ps/nm with a resolution of 0.27 ps/nm or finer.

The figure schematically depicts the measurement apparatus. The source of light for the measurement is a laser, the wavelength of which is monitored by an optical spectrum analyzer.A light-component analyzer amplitude-modulates the light with a scanning radio-frequency signal. The modulated light is passed through a buffer (described below)and through the device under test (e.g. an optical fiber, the dispersion of which one seeks to measure), then back to the light-component analyzer for spectrum analysis.

Dispersion in the device under test gives rise to phase shifts among the carrier and the upper and lower sideband components of the modulated signal. These phase shifts affect the modulation-frequency component of the output of a photodetector exposed to the signal that emerges from the device under test. One of the effects is that this component goes to zero periodically as the modulation frequency is varied. From the basic equations for dispersion of the modulated signal and the amplitude of the modulation-frequency output of the photodetector, the following equation has been derived:

where DT is the total dispersion, n is an integer, c is the speed of light, λ is the laser wavelength,and fn is the nth modulation frequency for which the photodetector output vanishes.

One of the conclusions that one can draw from the foregoing equation is that the lower limit of measurability in the AM method is set by the highest modulation frequency. For example, in the case of an apparatus that lacks a buffer but is otherwise identical to that shown in the figure and that has a maximum modulation frequency of 20 GHz and a laser wavelength of 1,550 nm, the minimum measurable dispersion is about 160 ps/nm.

What distinguishes the present method is the inclusion of the buffer, which can be an optical fiber, a fiber-optic grating or a combination of the two. The buffer must have a known dispersion, DB, approximately equal to or larger than the minimum measurable dispersion. One can determine DB from a measurement performed without the device under test (that is, the buffer only) in the optical train. When both the buffer and the device under test are present,the total dispersion is given by

where DDUT is the dispersion of the device under test. Then

By virtue of the subtraction of DB, the lower limit of measurability of DDUT is lower than that of DT. If the symbol of the dispersion is small, one can obtain it by measuring the change in fn (dfn) and then calculating it approximately as the differential of the immediately preceding equation:

This work was done by Shouhua Huang, Thanh Le, and Lute Maleki of Caltech for NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory. For further information, access the Technical Support Package (TSP) free on-line at www.techbriefs.com/tsp under the Physical Sciences category.

In accordance with Public Law 96-517,the contractor has elected to retain title to this invention.Inquiries concerning rights for its commercial use should be addressed to:

Innovative Technology Assets Management JPL
Mail Stop 202-233
4800 Oak Grove Drive
Pasadena,CA 91109-8099 (818)354-2240
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Refer to NPO-30406,volume and number of this NASA Tech Briefs issue, and the page number.



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Improved Measurement of Dispersion in an Optical Fiber

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