Paul Harper
Aston University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Paul Harper.
Optics Letters | 2011
Atalla El-Taher; Paul Harper; Sergey A. Babin; Dmitry Churkin; E.V. Podivilov; J.D. Ania-Castañón; Sergei K. Turitsyn
We experimentally demonstrate a Raman fiber laser based on multiple point-action fiber Bragg grating reflectors and distributed feedback via Rayleigh scattering in an ~22-km-long optical fiber. Twenty-two lasing lines with spacing of ~100 GHz (close to International Telecommunication Union grid) in the C band are generated at the watt level. In contrast to the normal cavity with competition between laser lines, the random distributed feedback cavity exhibits highly stable multiwavelength generation with a power-equalized uniform distribution, which is almost independent on power.
Physical Review A | 2011
Sergey A. Babin; Atalla El-Taher; Paul Harper; E.V. Podivilov; Sergei K. Turitsyn
An optical fiber is treated as a natural one-dimensional random system where lasing is possible due to a combination of Rayleigh scattering by refractive index inhomogeneities and distributed amplification through the Raman effect. We present such a random fiber laser that is tunable over a broad wavelength range with uniquely flat output power and high efficiency, which outperforms traditional lasers of the same category. Outstanding characteristics defined by deep underlying physics and the simplicity of the scheme make the demonstrated laser a very attractive light source both for fundamental science and practical applications.
optical fiber communication conference | 2014
Ian Phillips; Mingming Tan; Marc Stephens; Mary Elizabeth McCarthy; Elias Giacoumidis; Stylianos Sygletos; Pawel Rosa; Simon Fabbri; Son Thai Le; Thavamaran Kanesan; Sergei K. Turitsyn; Nick Doran; Paul Harper; Andrew D. Ellis
We demonstrate that a combination of Raman laser based amplification and optical phase conjugation enables transmission beyond the nonlinear-Shannon limit. We show nonlinear compensation of 7×114Gbit/s DP-QPSK channels, increasing system reach by 30%.
Optics Express | 2012
Dmitry Churkin; Atalla El-Taher; Ilya D. Vatnik; Juan Diego Ania-Castañón; Paul Harper; Eugeny V. Podivilov; Sergey A. Babin; Sergei K. Turitsyn
We have measured the longitudinal power distribution inside a random distributed feedback Raman fiber laser. The observed distribution has a sharp maximum whose position depends on pump power. The spatial distribution profiles are different for the first and the second Stokes waves. Both analytic solution and results of direct numerical modeling are in excellent agreement with experimental observations.
Journal of Optics | 2010
Hua Wang; Anton I. Latkin; Sonia Boscolo; Paul Harper; Sergei K. Turitsyn
We determine through numerical modelling the conditions for the generation of triangular-shaped optical pulses in a nonlinear, normally dispersive (ND) fibre and experimentally demonstrate triangular pulse formation in conventional ND fibre.
Jetp Letters | 2007
A. Yu Plotski; A. A. Sysoliatin; Anton I. Latkin; V. F. Khopin; Paul Harper; J. Harrison; Sergei K. Turitsyn
The experimental results for the propagation of high-power pulses in fibers with length-varying chromatic dispersion are presented.
Optics Express | 2007
V. Karalekas; J.D. Ania-Castañón; Paul Harper; S. A. Babin; E.V. Podivilov; Sergei K. Turitsyn
We present an experimental study of the impact of FWM-induced nonlinear spectral broadening on the effective reflectivity of ultra-long Raman fiber laser cavities of diverse lengths and fiber bases. We observe an exponential decay of the effective reflectivity with growing power. In standard single-mode fiber, effective reflectivity drops of up to 50% for shorter cavity lengths are observed, while the longest cavity length of 82.4km displays power leakage amounting to an effective reduction of reflectivity of approximately 30%. Using different types of fiber we examine the effect of chromatic dispersion on the Stokes wave broadening.
Optics Express | 2016
Mingming Tan; Pawel Rosa; Son Thai Le; Md. A. Iqbal; I. D. Phillips; Paul Harper
We demonstrate that a distributed Raman amplification scheme based on random distributed feedback (DFB) fiber laser enables bidirectional second-order Raman pumping without increasing relative intensity noise (RIN) of the signal. This extends the reach of 10 × 116 Gb/s DP-QPSK WDM transmission up to 7915 km, compared with conventional Raman amplification schemes. Moreover, this scheme gives the longest maximum transmission distance among all the Raman amplification schemes presented in this paper, whilst maintaining relatively uniform and symmetric signal power distribution, and is also adjustable in order to be highly compatible with different nonlinearity compensation techniques, including mid-link optical phase conjugation (OPC) and nonlinear Fourier transform (NFT).
Optics Express | 2015
Mingming Tan; Pawel Rosa; Son Thai Le; Ian Phillips; Paul Harper
We present, for the first time, a detailed investigation of the impact of second order co-propagating Raman pumping on long-haul 100G WDM DP-QPSK coherent transmission of up to 7082 km using Raman fibre laser based configurations. Signal power and noise distributions along the fibre for each pumping scheme were characterised both numerically and experimentally. Based on these pumping schemes, the Q factor penalties versus co-pump power ratios were experimentally measured and quantified. A significant Q factor penalty of up to 4.15 dB was observed after 1666 km using symmetric bidirectional pumping, compared with counter-pumping only. Our results show that whilst using co-pumping minimises the intra-cavity signal power variation and amplification noise, the Q factor penalty with co-pumping was too great for any advantage to be seen. The relative intensity noise (RIN) characteristics of the induced fibre laser and the output signal, and the intra-cavity RF spectra of the fibre laser are also presented. We attribute the Q factor degradation to RIN induced penalty due to RIN being transferred from the first order fibre laser and second order co-pump to the signal. More importantly, there were two different fibre lasing regimes contributing to the amplification. It was random distributed feedback lasing when using counter-pumping only and conventional Fabry-Perot cavity lasing when using all bidirectional pumping schemes. This also results in significantly different performances due to different laser cavity lengths for these two classes of laser.
Journal of Lightwave Technology | 2016
Andrew D. Ellis; Mingming Tan; Asif Iqbal; Mohammad Ahmad Zaki Al-Khateeb; Vladimir Gordienko; Gabriel Saavedra Mondaca; Simon Fabbri; Marc Stephens; Mary Elizabeth McCarthy; Andreas Perentos; Ian Phillips; Domanic Lavery; Gabriele Liga; Robert Maher; Paul Harper; Nick Doran; Sergei K. Turitsyn; Stylianos Sygletos; Polina Bayvel
In this paper, we experimentally demonstrate the benefit of polarization insensitive dual-band optical phase conjugation for up to ten 400 Gb/s optical super-channels using a Raman amplified transmission link with a realistic span length of 75 km. We demonstrate that the resultant increase in transmission distance may be predicted analytically if the detrimental impacts of power asymmetry and polarization mode dispersion are taken into account.