Deep-space optical communication links operate under severely limited signal power, approaching the photon-starved regime that requires a receiver capable of measuring individual incoming photons. This makes the photon information efficiency (PIE), i.e., the number of bits that can be retrieved from a single received photon, a relevant figure of merit to characterize data rates achievable in deep-space scenarios. We review theoretical PIE limits assuming a scalable modulation format, such as pulse position modulation (PPM), combined with a photon counting direct detection receiver. For unrestricted signal bandwidth, the attainable PIE is effectively limited by the background noise acquired by the propagating optical signal. The actual PIE limit depends on the effectiveness of the noise rejection mechanism implemented at the receiver, which can be improved by the nonlinear optical technique of quantum pulse gating. Further enhancement is possible by resorting to photon number resolved detection, which improves discrimination of PPM pulses against weak background noise. The results are compared with the ultimate quantum mechanical PIE limit implied by the Gordon–Holevo capacity bound, which takes into account general modulation formats as well as any physically permitted measurement techniques.
We show that utilizing pulse position modulation and photon number resolving detectors together with techniques such as quantum pulse gating allows to approach ultimate quantum limit on optical communication capacity in the presence of background noise in the weak output power regime. This shows that for communication over long distances by means of current existing technology it is possible to attain optimal performance, limited only by laws of quantum mechanics.
The information capacity of an optical channel under power constraints is ultimately limited by the quantum nature of transmitted signals. We discuss currently available and emerging photonic technologies whose combination can be shown theoretically to enable nearly quantum-limited operation of a noisy optical communication link in the photon-starved regime, with the information rate scaling linearly in the detected signal power. The key ingredients are quantum pulse gating to facilitate mode selectivity, photon-number-resolved direct detection, and a photon-efficient high-order modulation format such as pulse position modulation, frequency shift keying, or binary phase shift keyed Hadamard words decoded optically using structured receivers.
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