Abstract

The optical heterodyne balanced mixer, or dual-detector receiver, offers significant advantages over a single detector receiver. Balanced mixer receivers are particularly attractive for use in optical heterodyne communication systems because they conserve local oscillator power and cancel excess intensity noise present in the local oscillator. Simple circuit models that illustrate the noise performance, small signal gain, and bandwidth of a balanced mixer receiver are developed. A figure-of-merit for receiver noise performance is also derived. An example design of a gigahertz bandwidth optical heterodyne balanced mixer receiver and the techniques used to characterize near-quantum-limited receiver performance are discussed.

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