Experimental verification of fiber coupling characteristics for FSO downlinks from the International Space Station
Phuc V. Trinh, Dimitar Kolev, Koichi Shiratama, Alberto Carrasco‐Casado, Yasushi Munemasa, Hiroaki Yamazoe, Hiromitsu Komatsu, Toshiaki Kamata, Takashi Nakao, Shinji Ohta, Kyohei Iwamoto, Mikio Fujiwara, Hiroyuki Tsuji, Morio Toyoshima
Abstract
Free-space optical (FSO) systems are compulsory to realize high capacity and interference-free communication links from low-Earth orbit (LEO) satellite constellations as well as spacecraft and space stations to the Earth. To be integrated with high-capacity ground networks, the collected portion of the incident beam should be coupled into an optical fiber. To accurately evaluate the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) and bit-error rate (BER) performance metrics, the probability density function (PDF) of fiber coupling efficiency (CE) must be determined. Previous studies have experimentally verified the CE PDF for a single-mode fiber, however, there is no such investigation for the CE PDF of a multi-mode fiber (MMF) in a LEO-to-ground FSO downlink. In this paper, for the first time, the CE PDF for a 200-μm MMF is experimentally investigated using data from an FSO downlink from the Small Optical Link for International Space Station (SOLISS) terminal to a 40-cm sub-aperture optical ground station (OGS) supported by a fine-tracking system. An average CE of 5.45 dB was also achieved given that the alignment between SOLISS and OGS was not optimal. In addition, using the angle-of-arrival (AoA) and received power data, the statistical characteristics such as channel coherence time, power spectral density, spectrogram, and PDFs of AoA, beam misalignments, and atmospheric turbulence-induced fluctuations are revealed and compared with the state-of-the-art theoretical background.