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Optical multiple access techniques for on-board routingThe purpose of this research contract was to design and analyze an optical multiple access system, based on Code Division Multiple Access (CDMA) techniques, for on board routing applications on a future communication satellite. The optical multiple access system was to effect the functions of a circuit switch under the control of an autonomous network controller and to serve eight (8) concurrent users at a point to point (port to port) data rate of 180 Mb/s. (At the start of this program, the bit error rate requirement (BER) was undefined, so it was treated as a design variable during the contract effort.) CDMA was selected over other multiple access techniques because it lends itself to bursty, asynchronous, concurrent communication and potentially can be implemented with off the shelf, reliable optical transceivers compatible with long term unattended operations. Temporal, temporal/spatial hybrids and single pulse per row (SPR, sometimes termed 'sonar matrices') matrix types of CDMA designs were considered. The design, analysis, and trade offs required by the statement of work selected a temporal/spatial CDMA scheme which has SPR properties as the preferred solution. This selected design can be implemented for feasibility demonstration with off the shelf components (which are identified in the bill of materials of the contract Final Report). The photonic network architecture of the selected design is based on M(8,4,4) matrix codes. The network requires eight multimode laser transmitters with laser pulses of 0.93 ns operating at 180 Mb/s and 9-13 dBm peak power, and 8 PIN diode receivers with sensitivity of -27 dBm for the 0.93 ns pulses. The wavelength is not critical, but 830 nm technology readily meets the requirements. The passive optical components of the photonic network are all multimode and off the shelf. Bit error rate (BER) computations, based on both electronic noise and intercode crosstalk, predict a raw BER of (10 exp -3) when all eight users are communicating concurrently. If better BER performance is required, then error correction codes (ECC) using near term electronic technology can be used. For example, the M(8,4,4) optical code together with Reed-Solomon (54,38,8) encoding provides a BER of better than (10 exp -11). The optical transceiver must then operate at 256 Mb/s with pulses of 0.65 ns because the 'bits' are now channel symbols.
Document ID
19920016189
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Contractor Report (CR)
Authors
Mendez, Antonio J.
(Mendez R and D Associates El Segundo, CA., United States)
Park, Eugene
(Mendez R and D Associates El Segundo, CA., United States)
Gagliardi, Robert M.
(University of Southern California Los Angeles., United States)
Date Acquired
September 6, 2013
Publication Date
March 1, 1992
Subject Category
Communications And Radar
Report/Patent Number
NASA-CR-187221
NAS 1.26:187221
Report Number: NASA-CR-187221
Report Number: NAS 1.26:187221
Accession Number
92N25432
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: NAS3-25925
PROJECT: RTOP 321-01-00
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
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