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Abstract
Free-space optical communication is a promising means to establish versatile, secure and high-bandwidth communication between mobile nodes for many critical applications. While the spatial modes of light offer a degree of freedom to increase the information capacity of an optical link, atmospheric turbulence can introduce severe distortion to the spatial modes and lead to data degradation. Here, we demonstrate experimentally a vector-beam-based, turbulence-resilient communication protocol, namely spatial polarization differential phase shift keying (SPDPSK), that can reliably transmit high-dimensional information through a turbulent channel without the need of any adaptive optics for beam compensation. In a proof-of-principle experiment with a controllable turbulence cell, we measure a channel capacity of 4.84 bits per pulse using 34 vector modes through a turbulent channel with a scintillation index of 1.09, and 4.02 bits per pulse using 18 vector modes through even stronger turbulence corresponding to a scintillation index of 1.54.
Resistance to turbulence is an ongoing challenge for point-to-point freespace communications. Here the authors present a protocol for encoding a large amount of information in vector beams that are transmittable through a moderately strong turbulent channel without adaptive beam compensation.
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1 University of South Florida, Department of Physics, Tampa, USA (GRID:grid.170693.a) (ISNI:0000 0001 2353 285X)
2 University of South Florida, Department of Physics, Tampa, USA (GRID:grid.170693.a) (ISNI:0000 0001 2353 285X); Michigan State University, College of Natural Science, East Lansing, USA (GRID:grid.17088.36) (ISNI:0000 0001 2150 1785)
3 University of Rochester, The Institute of Optics, Rochester, USA (GRID:grid.16416.34) (ISNI:0000 0004 1936 9174)
4 University of Rochester, The Institute of Optics, Rochester, USA (GRID:grid.16416.34) (ISNI:0000 0004 1936 9174); University of Ottawa, Department of Physics, Ottawa, Canada (GRID:grid.28046.38) (ISNI:0000 0001 2182 2255); Max Plank Institute for the Science of Light, Erlangen, Germany (GRID:grid.28046.38)
5 Max Plank Institute for the Science of Light, Erlangen, Germany (GRID:grid.28046.38)