Presentation + Paper
12 March 2024 Physical layer forward error correction for free-space optical links
Author Affiliations +
Proceedings Volume 12877, Free-Space Laser Communications XXXVI; 128770J (2024) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.3001394
Event: SPIE LASE, 2024, San Francisco, California, United States
Abstract
We consider high data rate free-space optical links between satellite and ground station, which are prone to strong variations of the received signal due to atmospheric turbulence. The high data rates towards hundreds of Gbit/s paired with channel coherence times of a few milliseconds pose a serious challenge for reliable transmission. On such non-ergodic channels, the use of appropriate diversity techniques combined with channel coding schemes is a must to ensure the required data rates. There are several ways to tackle the problem. A pragmatic approach is to rely on commercial transceivers from fiber optics, which are, however, not tailored to the free-space optical channel. Code rates are high and no suitable diversity schemes are foreseen. Such transceivers can be combined with a suitable retransmission scheme, which strongly reduces spectral efficiency. Another option is the addition of a complementary erasure coding scheme at a higher layer, which, due to its long codewords and additional redundancy, can correct longer sequences of errors. However, such a layered scheme yields a loss in achievable data rates. In this work, we rely on a theoretically optimal approach which is composed of a long physical layer interleaver as well as a long physical layer channel code. While the interleaver should provide the required time diversity, the selected strongly quantized Low-Density Parity-Check (LDPC) code should correct the errors in the data. To support the required data rates, highly optimized hardware implementation becomes mandatory for both interleaver and decoder. To achieve high error correction performance and data rates towards hundreds of Gbit/s, a cross-layer design methodology is mandatory in which interleaver design, code, and decoding algorithms are jointly considered with its hardware implementation. We show that an Application-Specific Integrated Circuit (ASIC) implementation can reach the target data rates with a moderate backoff from theoretical limits.
Conference Presentation
(2024) Published by SPIE. Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Oliver Griebel, Alexander Sauter, Uwe Wasenmüller, Lukas Steiner, Juraj Poliak, Balázs Matuz, and Norbert Wehn "Physical layer forward error correction for free-space optical links", Proc. SPIE 12877, Free-Space Laser Communications XXXVI, 128770J (12 March 2024); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.3001394
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KEYWORDS
Matrices

Error control coding

Forward error correction

Energy efficiency

Free space optics

Satellites

Optical transmission

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