Abstract

We discuss the implementation of fiber-optic lattice structures incorporating single-mode fibers and directional couplers. These fiber structures can be used to perform various high-speed time-domain and frequency-domain functions such as matrix operations and frequency filtering. In this paper we mainly consider systems in which the signals (optical intensities) and coupling coefficients are nonnegative quantities; these systems fit well in the theory of positive systems. We use this theory to conclude, for example, that for such systems the pole of the system transfer function with the largest magnitude is simple and positive-valued (in the Z-plane), and that the magnitude of the frequency response can nowhere exceed its value at the origin. We also discuss the effects of various noise phenomena on the performance of fiber-optic signal processors, particularly considering the effects of laser source phase fluctuations. Experimental results are presented showing that the dynamic range of the fiber systems, discussed in this paper, is limited, not by the laser source intensity noise or shot noise, but by the laser phase-induced intensity noise. Mathematical analyses of lattice structures as well as additional applications are also presented.

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