Paper
10 February 2012 On approaching the ultimate limits of communication using a photon-counting detector
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Coherent states achieve the Holevo capacity of a pure-loss channel when paired with an optimal measurement, but a physical realization of this measurement scheme is as of yet unknown, and it is also likely to be of high complexity. In this paper, we focus on the photon-counting measurement and study the photon and dimensional efficiencies attainable with modulations over classical- and nonclassical-state alphabets. We analyze two binary-modulation architectures that improve upon the dimensional versus photon efficiency tradeoff achievable with the state-of-the-art coherent-state on-off keying modulation. We show that at high photon efficiency these architectures achieve an efficiency tradeoff that differs from the best possible tradeoff--determined by the Holevo capacity--by only a constant factor. The first architecture we analyze is a coherent-state transmitter that relies on feedback from the receiver to control the transmitted energy. The second architecture uses a single-photon number-state source.
© (2012) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Baris I. Erkmen, Bruce E. Moision, Samuel J. Dolinar, Kevin M. Birnbaum, and Dariush Divsalar "On approaching the ultimate limits of communication using a photon-counting detector", Proc. SPIE 8246, Free-Space Laser Communication Technologies XXIV, 824605 (10 February 2012); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.908695
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Cited by 8 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Receivers

Photodetectors

Transmitters

Modulation

Photon counting

Binary data

Near field

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