Kensuke IKEDA Toshiaki KURI Yoshiro TAKAHASHI Ken-ichi KITAYAMA
Full-duplex transmission of 60.0 GHz and 59.6 GHz millimeter-wave (mm-wave) signals of 155.52-Mbit/s differential phase shift keying (DPSK) data, radio-on-fiber (ROF) signals over 25-km-long standard single-mode fibers (SMFs) is experimentally demonstrated for the first time using a single 2-RF-port electroabsorption transceiver (EAT). The simplification of base stations (BSs) is strongly required to realize cost-effective and high-reliability mm-wave wireless access. This single EAT detects a C-band ROF signal modulated by a mm-wave downlink signal and simultaneously modulates the L-band optical carrier by a mm-wave uplink signal. The BS mainly consists of the EAT, leading to a simple and low-cost BS. Optical pilot tones and optical bandpass filters are used for photonic downconversion and photonic upconversion, to convert frequencies between mm-wave signals and intermediate frequency (IF) signals in the optical domain. With the use of optical conversions, these signals have no significant fading problems. The simultaneous transmission of both up- and downlinks has been achieved with the BER of less than 10-9. Also the fading problems due to the fiber dispersion of photonic conversions are analyzed mathematically in this paper. The single-EAT BS will become a promising candidate for a ROF access system.
Xiaoke YI Chao LU Fang WEI Wen De ZHONG Yixin WANG
In the paper, we propose a new method for chromatic dispersion measurement of WDM components in both transmission and reflection, employing photonic microwave technology. The dispersion can be determined by measuring the frequency spectrum range change of the microwave notch filter. The method features the advantages of low-cost and simplicity. Experimental results demonstrate that our setup is capable of measuring relative group delay with better than 1 ps time resolution and the measurement results show a good agreement with that measured by the conventional phase-shift technique.
Tae-Su KIM Bong-Seok KIM Seung-Jin KIM Byung-Ju KIM Kyung-Nam PARK Kuhn-Il LEE
This paper proposes a new multispectral image data compression algorithm that can efficiently reduce spatial and spectral redundancies by applying classified prediction, a Karhunen-Loeve transform (KLT), and the three-dimensional set partitioning in hierarchical trees (3-D SPIHT) algorithm in the wavelet transform (WT) domain. The classification is performed in the WT domain to exploit the interband classified dependency, while the resulting class information is used for the interband prediction. The residual image data on the prediction errors between the original image data and the predicted image data is decorrelated by a KLT. Finally, the 3-D SPIHT algorithm is used to encode the transformed coefficients listed in a descending order spatially and spectrally as a result of the WT and KLT. Simulation results showed that the reconstructed images after using the proposed algorithm exhibited a better quality and higher compression ratio than those using conventional algorithms.
Dae-Hyun KIM Jung-Hoon KIM Yong-In YOON In-Hwan OH Jong-Soo CHOI
In this paper, we propose an algorithm that automatically generates the intermediate scenes using the bidirectional disparity morphing (BDM) from the parallel stereo images. The two-step search strategy is used for speeding up the computation of the bidirectional disparity map and three occluding patterns are used for smoothing the computed disparities more elaborately. Using the bidirectional disparity map, we interpolate the left and the right image to their intermediate scenes. Then we dissolve two interpolated images into the desired intermediate scene which the holes are removed and the effect of the disparity estimation errors is minimized. We implemented the proposed algorithm on TM1300 supported by TriMedia using pSOSytem which enables to do multiprocessing. As a result, we can interpolate the high-quality intermediate scenes with real-time process.
Advanced optical transmission fibers have enabled 40-Gb/s transmission over distances of up to 5200km with 100-km amplified spans. This paper will discuss a number of the enabling fiber properties including dispersion, dispersion slope, Raman gain efficiency, and polarization mode dispersion.
Hiroyasu SONE Masaaki IMAI Yoh IMAI Yasuhiro HARADA
It is found that the supercontinuum spectrum is generated from cross-phase modulated soliton pulses which are propagated through a dispersion-flattened/decreasing fiber with low birefringence. The cross-phase modulation is achieved by exciting two orthogonally polarized modes in a birefringent fiber and the effect of input azimuth of linearly polarized pulses is discussed theoretically and numerically.
Electron field emission from diamond, diamond-like carbon, carbon nanotubes and nano-structured carbon is compared. It is found that in all practical cases, emission occurs from regions of positive electron affinity with an emission barrier of 5eV, the work function, and with a large field enhancement. The field enhancement in nanotubes arises from their geometry. In diamond, the field enhancement occurs by depletion of grain boundary states. In diamond-like carbon we propose that it occurs by the presence of sp2-rich channels formed by the soft conditioning process.
Katsuhiko HIRABAYASHI Chikara AMANO
We have formed simple polarization-controller arrays by inserting liquid crystal (LC) in trenches cut across planar lightwave circuits (PLCs). We fabricated LC layers for use as polarization controllers on PLCs in two ways; in one, the ultra-thin layer of LC is held in a cell that is inserted into a trench on the PLC while in the other, the trench is directly filled with the LC. The ultra-thin LC cell can change the phase of 1.55-µm light from 0 to 3π while the LC filling can change the phase of light at the same wavelength from 0 to 12π below 5Vrms. Two former parallel-aligned ultra-thin LC cells, where the directions of alignment of the liquid crystals are rotated by 45 relative to each other, are capable of converting light with an arbitrary input polarization to TE or TM polarization. Ultra-thin cells of twisted nematic LC can switch the polarization between TE and TM modes with an extinction ratio of -15dB. The array we fabricated had a pitch of 1 mm and 5 elements, but an array with more than 100 elements and a pitch below 125µm will easily be possible by using finely patterned transparent electrodes. We have also applied our techniques to the fabrication of LC-based variable optical attenuators (VOA) on the PLC.
This study is a detailed numerical investigation on the relations between the performance of the RZ format single-channel transmission, and the chromatic dispersion of transmission fiber and pre-compensation ratio. We observed the transition from the SPM dominant low dispersion region to the intra-channel nonlinearities dominant high dispersion region, and found that the EOP is very sensitive to the pre-compensation ratio when the dispersion assumes a intermediate value. Furthermore, by analyzing the optical power-dependence of the EOP and other nonlinear impairments, we found that the amplitude fluctuation resulting from IFWM is dominant in determining the EOP in the transmission systems employing highly dispersed pulses.
Ki-Duck CHO Heung-Sik TAE Sung-Il CHIEN
A new multi-luminance-level subfield method is proposed to reduce the low gray-level contour of an alternate current plasma display panel (AC-PDP). The minimum or maximum luminance level per sustain-cycle can be altered by simultaneously applying the proper auxiliary short pulses. As a result, the multi-luminance levels per one or two sustain pulse pairs can be expressed by properly adjusting the auxiliary short pulses for the one or two sustain-cycle subfields, thereby suppressing a low gray-level contour of AC-PDP.
Shinji YAMASHITA Teruyuki BABA Yoshinori NAMIHIRA
We propose and demonstrate a novel method to measure the polarization mode dispersion (PMD) of optical devices. The device under test (DUT) is installed in a fiber laser cavity which can operate at multiwavelength. PMD can be evaluated by the wavelength spacing of the multiwavelength laser output spectrum. In our method, the maximum extrema wavelength is easier to be identified than in the conventional fixed-analyzer (FA) method. We measure the PMD of polarization maintaining fibers (PMFs) and the ITU-T round robin KDD samples.
Hideki MAEDA Masatoyo SUMIDA Tsutomu KUBO Takamasa IMAI
We clarify the effectiveness of receiver-side compensation in offsetting fiber Bragg grating (FBG) dispersion induced-electrical signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) degradation in a 10 Gb/s 8-channel wavelength-division multiplexing (WDM) 6,400 km transmission system. The receiver-side compensation greatly improves the SNR degradation. The allowable accumulated FBG dispersion is -400 1000ps/nm for the worst arrangement, a single FBG at the transmitter, which is about half the accumulated fiber dispersion permissible with receiver-side compensation.
Andreas CHRIST Jurg FROHLICH Niels KUSTER
This paper proposes a novel method to correct numerical phase velocity errors in FDTD meshes with nonuniform step size. It enables the complete compensation of the phase velocity errors introduced by the mesh grading for one frequency and one arbitrary direction of propagation independently of the mesh grading. This permits the usage of the Total-Field-Scattered-Field formulation in connection with electrically large nonuniform FDTD meshes and allows a general reduction of the grid dispersion errors. The capabilities of the proposed method are demonstrated with the help of two examples: (1) the fields in a dielectric sphere illuminated by a plane wave are calculated and (2) a patch antenna simulation demonstrates that the uncertainty in determining its resonance frequency can be reduced by about 50%.
Masanobu HARAGUCHI Toshihiro OKAMOTO Masuo FUKUI
We calculated linear and nonlinear responses of a Kerr nonlinear microsphere sandwiched by two prisms using the excitation of whispering gallery modes due to near-field coupling. As numerical calculations, the finite-difference time-domain method that takes into account the Kerr nonlinear effect was used. We dealt with two types of spheres, i.e., the Kerr-material sphere and the dielectric sphere coated by the Kerr material. It was found that the optical switching phenomena are induced in such spheres. The switching results from the fact that the variations of the refractive index of the nonlinear spheres affect the excitation condition of the whispering gallery modes.
Yasutaka IGARASHI Hiroyuki YASHIMA
We investigate dispersion compensation using dispersion-compensating fibers (DCFs) for ultrashort light pulse code division multiple access (CDMA) communication systems in a multi-user environment. We employ fiber link that consists of a standard single-mode fiber (SMF) connected with two different types of DCFs. Fiber dispersion can be effectively decreased by adjusting the length ratios of DCFs to SMF appropriately. Some criteria for dispersion compensation are proposed and their performances are compared. We theoretically derive a bit error rate (BER) of ultrashort light pulse CDMA systems including the effects of the dispersion and multiple access interference (MAI). Moreover, we reveal the mutual relations among BER performance, fiber dispersion, MAI, the number of chips, a bandwidth of a signal, and a transmission distance for the first time. As a result, we show that our compensation strategy improves system performance drastically.
Shiro SUYAMA Hideaki TAKADA Sakuichi OHTSUKA
We propose a novel three-dimensional (3-D) display using only two 2-D images displayed at different depths. It is based on a new perceptual phenomenon induced by the human binocular visual system and enables an observer using no extra equipment to perceive an apparent 3-D image of continuous depth when the luminance is divided between the 2-D images according to the 3-D image depth. Our prototype direct-vision 3-D display using this mechanism can easily produce moving 3-D color images by using conventional 2-D color displays.
Hiroyuki HOSHINO Shin'ichi KOJIMA Yuji UCHIYAMA Takero HONGO
Recently, information display equipment such as a navigation system has often come to be installed in a vehicle, and a variety of useful information has been offered to the driver by voice and images while driving. The necessity of improving safety when the driver receives such information has come to be stressed. As one of the means of solving this problem, we can develop a system that presents the driving and road conditions information such as a lane changing car to the driver by using a warning sound. The purpose of our study is to clarify the effectiveness of an auditory display that uses spatial sounds on such a system. An experiment for measuring the driver's reaction time and eye movements to LED lighting during actual driving has been carried out to investigate whether the spatial sound can quicken the driver's operation and decrease human error. We evaluated the effectiveness by two measures, average reaction time and the number of largely delayed reactions. We considered that the average reaction time corresponds to the quickness of the driver's operation, and the number of largely delayed reactions corresponds to the probability of human error. As a result of the experiment, the use of directional sound clearly showed better performance than the use of monaural sound and no sound in the number of largely delayed reactions. Moreover, we analyzed the factors involved in delay of the reaction by the results of eye movement measurements. Consequently, it has been found that directional sound can decrease the number of the largely delayed reactions, which lead to an accident during actual driving.
Payman MOALLEM Karim FAEZ Javad HADDADNIA
Finding corresponding edges is considered being the most difficult part of edge-based stereo matching algorithms. Usually, correspondence for a feature point in the first image is obtained by searching in a predefined region of the second image, based on epipolar line and maximum disparity. Reduction of search region can increase performances of the matching process, in the context of execution time and accuracy. Traditionally, hierarchical multiresolution techniques, as the fastest methods are used to decrease the search space and therefore increase the processing speed. Considering maximum of directional derivative of disparity in real scenes, we formulated some relations between maximum search space in the second images with respect to relative displacement of connected edges (as the feature points), in successive scan lines of the first images. Then we proposed a new matching strategy to reduce the search space for edge-based stereo matching algorithms. Afterward, we developed some fast stereo matching algorithms based on the proposed matching strategy and the hierarchical multiresolution techniques. The proposed algorithms have two stages: feature extraction and feature matching. We applied these new algorithms on some stereo images and compared their results with those of some hierarchical multiresolution ones. The execution times of our proposed methods are decreased between 30% to 55%, in the feature matching stage. Moreover, the execution time of the overall algorithms (including the feature extraction and the feature matching) is decreased between 15% to 40% in real scenes. Meanwhile in some cases, the accuracy is increased too. Theoretical investigation and experimental results show that our algorithms have a very good performance with real complex scenes, therefore these new algorithms are very suitable for fast edge-based stereo applications in real scenes like robotic applications.
Takashi TANIGUCHI Atsushi NAGATA Tetsuji KISHI Yasushi TAMAKOSHI Yoshiteru MINO Masanori HENMI Masayuki MASUMOTO Hiroshi MANABE Satoshi SHIGENAGA Atsushi KOTANI Hiroshi KADOTA
A new graphic and display processor, which is suitable for high-performance car navigation systems or next-generation ITS mobile terminals, has been developed. The performance bottleneck of conventional consumer graphic systems exists not only in the rendering performance of the graphic processor itself, but also in CPU-capability and CPU-bus bandwidth. To release this latter bottleneck, the new processor has Controller/DSP Unit and FPU for graphic-macro-command parsing and geometric operations, respectively, which used to be the CPU tasks and occupy some amount of CPU-bus bandwidth to transfer their results. The architecture of the new processor is organized so as to carry out macro-pipelined operations of graphic and display processing smoothly. One of the features of this processor is having special hardware, Polygon-Engine and Short-Vector-Accelerator, for the rapid rendering of 2D maps, where complex polygons and short line-segments are the dominant objects to be rendered. Another feature is the hardware support of multi-layer/window display with alpha-blend overlapping. This function and additional video processing capability, such as MPEG4 decoding, would be useful in the next generation intelligent terminals. The processor LSI has been successfully fabricated by using 0.18 µm standard CMOS technology. More than five million transistors are implemented on this chip. The peak rendering speed of this processor has been measured as 200 Mpixel/s at 133 MHz processor internal clock frequency. Other results of the graphic system evaluation have demonstrated that this new processor has appropriately high performance and useful functions for the next generation mobile terminals.
Kiyoharu AIZAWA Kentaro KAKAMI
Mobile terminals with Internet services such as i-mode are in wide use, and communication bandwidths are growing even further under 3G technology. However, displays of mobile terminals will remain small in view of their portable size and power consumption. In this paper, we propose a "ubiquitous display" that can be used in combination with mobile terminals. The user operates the mobile terminal and the ubiquitous display shows any content that requires a large screen space.