Phase Estimators with Predetection Feedback for Optical Communication

Causal, minimum mean-square error (MMSE) estimators of a Gauss-Markov process observed through a conditional Poisson process whose rate parameter is a linear function of the estimation error are presented. Although the conditional estimation performance is data dependent, precomputable upper bounds...

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Veröffentlicht in:I.R.E. transactions on communications systems 1976-11, Vol.24 (11), p.1231-1237
1. Verfasser: Robinson, S.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Causal, minimum mean-square error (MMSE) estimators of a Gauss-Markov process observed through a conditional Poisson process whose rate parameter is a linear function of the estimation error are presented. Although the conditional estimation performance is data dependent, precomputable upper bounds on the average estimation performance are obtained. Approximate expressions are also presented for the Cramer-Rao lower bound, and it is shown that the estimator performance achieves that bound with equality when the estimator is operating considerably "above threshold." The estimator structure is applied to the problem of phase-tracking receivers for optical communication. Two receiver structures that use predetector phase feedback are considered: one uses local reference fields to allow the detector to observe phase error (homodyne/heterodyne), while the other is a novel direct detection receiver that depends explicitly on the closed-loop nature of the phase estimator. It is concluded that a large local oscillator amplitude is desirable to improve the phase-tracking performance in the homodyne/heterodyne case, and that as few as 4/8 detected signal photons per phase coherence time are required to keep the estimator above threshold. The direct detection scheme achieves the same performance as the homodyne system only in the limit of no dark current-background noise counts, and in general may require considerably more signal photons to keep the estimator "locked."
ISSN:0090-6778
0096-2244
1558-0857
DOI:10.1109/TCOM.1976.1093241