Nature Communications (Aug 2023)

Atmospheric turbulence strength distribution along a propagation path probed by longitudinally structured optical beams

  • Huibin Zhou,
  • Xinzhou Su,
  • Yuxiang Duan,
  • Hao Song,
  • Kaiheng Zou,
  • Runzhou Zhang,
  • Haoqian Song,
  • Nanzhe Hu,
  • Moshe Tur,
  • Alan E. Willner

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-40381-z
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 13

Abstract

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Abstract Atmospheric turbulence can cause critical problems in many applications. To effectively avoid or mitigate turbulence, knowledge of turbulence strength at various distances could be of immense value. Due to light-matter interaction, optical beams can probe longitudinal turbulence changes. Unfortunately, previous approaches tended to be limited to relatively short distances or large transceivers. Here, we explore turbulence probing utilizing multiple sequentially transmitted longitudinally structured beams. Each beam is composed of Bessel-Gaussian ( $${{{{{{\rm{BG}}}}}}}_{{{{{{\mathcal{l}}}}}}{{=}}0,{k}_{z}}$$ BG l = 0 , k z ) modes with different $${k}_{z}$$ k z values such that a distance-varying beam width is produced, which results in a distance- and turbulence-dependent modal coupling to $${{{{{\mathcal{l}}}}}}{{{{{\mathscr{\ne }}}}}}0$$ l {{\relax \special {t4ht̂3)}\o:mathrel: {\unhbox \voidb@x \special {t4ht@+{38}{35}x2260;}x}}} 0 orders. Our simulation shows that this approach has relatively uniform and low errors (<0.3 dB) over a 10-km path with up to 30-dB turbulence-structure-constant variation. We experimentally demonstrate this approach for two emulated turbulence regions (~15-dB variation) with <0.8-dB errors. Compared to previous techniques, our approach can potentially probe longer distances or require smaller transceivers.