EP4356549A1 - Terminal optique de communication par signaux laser - Google Patents
Terminal optique de communication par signaux laserInfo
- Publication number
- EP4356549A1 EP4356549A1 EP23761184.3A EP23761184A EP4356549A1 EP 4356549 A1 EP4356549 A1 EP 4356549A1 EP 23761184 A EP23761184 A EP 23761184A EP 4356549 A1 EP4356549 A1 EP 4356549A1
- Authority
- EP
- European Patent Office
- Prior art keywords
- laser beam
- light beam
- useful
- receiver
- optical terminal
- Prior art date
- Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
- Granted
Links
- 230000003287 optical effect Effects 0.000 title claims abstract description 91
- 238000004891 communication Methods 0.000 title claims abstract description 27
- 230000005540 biological transmission Effects 0.000 claims description 32
- 230000007717 exclusion Effects 0.000 claims description 32
- 238000005286 illumination Methods 0.000 claims description 17
- 238000001514 detection method Methods 0.000 claims description 14
- 238000000034 method Methods 0.000 claims description 13
- 230000005855 radiation Effects 0.000 claims description 13
- 230000003595 spectral effect Effects 0.000 claims description 7
- 238000010586 diagram Methods 0.000 claims description 6
- 230000002093 peripheral effect Effects 0.000 description 7
- 230000006872 improvement Effects 0.000 description 4
- 238000009826 distribution Methods 0.000 description 3
- 230000007423 decrease Effects 0.000 description 2
- 238000013461 design Methods 0.000 description 2
- 238000012986 modification Methods 0.000 description 2
- 230000004048 modification Effects 0.000 description 2
- 230000002265 prevention Effects 0.000 description 2
- 230000004888 barrier function Effects 0.000 description 1
- 230000003247 decreasing effect Effects 0.000 description 1
- 230000000593 degrading effect Effects 0.000 description 1
- 230000001939 inductive effect Effects 0.000 description 1
- 238000002955 isolation Methods 0.000 description 1
- 230000010287 polarization Effects 0.000 description 1
- 230000008569 process Effects 0.000 description 1
- 238000012545 processing Methods 0.000 description 1
- 210000001747 pupil Anatomy 0.000 description 1
- 230000008054 signal transmission Effects 0.000 description 1
- 230000002269 spontaneous effect Effects 0.000 description 1
- 238000012546 transfer Methods 0.000 description 1
Classifications
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04K—SECRET COMMUNICATION; JAMMING OF COMMUNICATION
- H04K3/00—Jamming of communication; Counter-measures
- H04K3/80—Jamming or countermeasure characterized by its function
- H04K3/82—Jamming or countermeasure characterized by its function related to preventing surveillance, interception or detection
- H04K3/825—Jamming or countermeasure characterized by its function related to preventing surveillance, interception or detection by jamming
-
- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04K—SECRET COMMUNICATION; JAMMING OF COMMUNICATION
- H04K3/00—Jamming of communication; Counter-measures
- H04K3/40—Jamming having variable characteristics
- H04K3/43—Jamming having variable characteristics characterized by the control of the jamming power, signal-to-noise ratio or geographic coverage area
-
- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04K—SECRET COMMUNICATION; JAMMING OF COMMUNICATION
- H04K3/00—Jamming of communication; Counter-measures
- H04K3/80—Jamming or countermeasure characterized by its function
- H04K3/82—Jamming or countermeasure characterized by its function related to preventing surveillance, interception or detection
- H04K3/822—Jamming or countermeasure characterized by its function related to preventing surveillance, interception or detection by detecting the presence of a surveillance, interception or detection
-
- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04K—SECRET COMMUNICATION; JAMMING OF COMMUNICATION
- H04K2203/00—Jamming of communication; Countermeasures
- H04K2203/10—Jamming or countermeasure used for a particular application
- H04K2203/14—Jamming or countermeasure used for a particular application for the transfer of light or images, e.g. for video-surveillance, for television or from a computer screen
-
- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04K—SECRET COMMUNICATION; JAMMING OF COMMUNICATION
- H04K3/00—Jamming of communication; Counter-measures
- H04K3/40—Jamming having variable characteristics
- H04K3/41—Jamming having variable characteristics characterized by the control of the jamming activation or deactivation time
-
- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04K—SECRET COMMUNICATION; JAMMING OF COMMUNICATION
- H04K3/00—Jamming of communication; Counter-measures
- H04K3/40—Jamming having variable characteristics
- H04K3/42—Jamming having variable characteristics characterized by the control of the jamming frequency or wavelength
-
- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04K—SECRET COMMUNICATION; JAMMING OF COMMUNICATION
- H04K3/00—Jamming of communication; Counter-measures
- H04K3/40—Jamming having variable characteristics
- H04K3/45—Jamming having variable characteristics characterized by including monitoring of the target or target signal, e.g. in reactive jammers or follower jammers for example by means of an alternation of jamming phases and monitoring phases, called "look-through mode"
Definitions
- the present description relates to a terminal, a system and a method for optical communication by laser signals. It relates more particularly to such terminals, systems and methods which make it possible to transmit useful signals to a recipient in a manner which is secure with respect to unwanted reception by a third party.
- this illumination is not completely zero outside the direction of transmission, and a spy receiver which is close to the free field propagation path which connects the transmitter to the recipient receiver could perhaps succeed in detecting successfully transmitted signals.
- the terminal transmitting the signals is called Alice
- the receiver receiving these signals is called Bob
- the spy who is likely to detect the signals transmitted by Alice to Bob is called Eve.
- Such a need to communicate securely applies to usual communications by laser beam, to transmit unencrypted data, but it also applies to the transmission of encryption keys, in particular encryption keys.
- encryption keys in particular encryption keys.
- the key generation rate requirements are determined by the level of security that is required by the cryptographic protocol used, and by the length of each useful content that is to be transmitted in an encrypted manner. The highest security is provided by an OTP type protocol, for “One time pad” in English, but lower levels of security are provided by other protocols, such as the AES3 protocol.
- an aim of the present invention is to improve the level of security of communications by laser signals.
- the invention aims to reduce the risk that a spy receiver which is located near the propagation path of the laser signals, or outside an exclusion volume, can successfully detect the signals transmitted.
- An additional aim of the invention is to make it possible to increase the key generation rate for a laser beam communication mode.
- a first aspect of the invention proposes an optical terminal for communication by laser signals, adapted to emit a laser beam, called a useful laser beam, which is modulated by so as to transmit useful signals to an external optical receiver at the optical terminal, called the recipient receiver.
- the useful laser beam has at least one wavelength and forms at least one illumination spot inside a plane, called the reception plane, which is perpendicular to a direction of propagation of the useful laser beam. and which is located at the recipient receiver.
- the optical terminal is adapted to further emit a jamming light beam, so that the useful laser beam and the jamming light beam satisfy the following properties:
- a direction of emission of the jamming light beam is such that this jamming light beam forms, in the reception plane, a superposition with the useful laser beam;
- the jamming light beam has a non-zero spectral power value for the wavelength of the useful laser beam, such that at this wavelength and in the reception plane, the jamming light beam constitutes a contribution noise compared to useful signals;
- - respective intensities of the useful laser beam and the jamming light beam are such that at the wavelength of the useful laser beam and in the reception plane, there exists a zone, called the destination zone, inside which the superposition of the two beams presents values of a signal-to-noise ratio, for the useful signals, at any point in the destination zone which are all greater than a limit value, and this signal-to-noise ratio -noise simultaneously has values which are all less than the limit value at any other point in the reception plane outside the destination area.
- the invention therefore establishes security by additional physical layer, for the transmission of useful signals in the case of a communication mode which uses laser beam propagation in a free field.
- useful signals are understood to mean signals which result from the modulation of the useful laser beam in order to transcribe data into a format which allows transmission to the recipient receiver.
- the optical terminal for communication by laser signals which is the subject of the first aspect of the invention is Alice according to the conventional name in the technical field of quantum encryption, and the recipient receiver is Bob.
- the invention therefore adds the jamming light beam to the useful laser beam, during communication from Alice to Bob, to reduce the possibility that a spy, that is to say Eve, manages to detect the useful signals by placing a spy receiver near Bob.
- the optical terminal can be adapted to emit the jamming light beam by adjusting a defocusing of this jamming light beam, or inside a common instrument which produces the laser beam useful and the jamming light beam, or inside an instrument which produces the jamming light beam while being separated from another instrument which produces the useful laser beam.
- the optical terminal can be adapted so that the useful laser beam and the jamming light beam, as emitted by the optical terminal, have respective emission diagram shapes which are the same.
- emission diagrams each expressed in the form of angular power density values as a function of values of an angular deviation relative to a central direction of emission, are all both decreasing, or have the same successive alternations of decrease and growth.
- the useful laser beam and the jamming light beam, as emitted by the terminal can have Gaussian profiles.
- the jamming light beam can be another laser beam.
- the optical terminal can be adapted so that at any point inside the destination zone, the useful laser beam produces an illuminance value which is greater than an illuminance value of the jamming light beam at the wavelength of the useful laser beam, and so that at any other point on the reception plane outside the destination zone, the useful laser beam simultaneously produces a value of illuminance which is less than an illuminance value of the jamming light beam also at the wavelength of the useful laser beam.
- the jamming light beam constitutes the main source of noise, compared to other contributions to the noise which may otherwise exist and which would be much weaker, the limiting value of the signal-to-noise ratio is then approximately equal to one to the border of the destination area.
- the optical terminal can be adapted so that the jamming light beam is modulated randomly or pseudo-randomly.
- the noise which is thus produced by the jamming light beam can have any spectral characteristic. In particular, it may be a spectral characteristic of white noise, spontaneous emission noise, thermal noise, etc.
- the optical terminal can be adapted so that each of the useful laser beam and the jamming light beam is modulated in the form of successive pulses.
- the invention is compatible with other modulation modes, such as polarization modulation, frequency modulation or phase modulation, for example.
- the jamming light beam can be another laser beam, which then has a wavelength identical to that of the useful laser beam.
- the optical terminal can comprise a noise source which is arranged to modulate the jamming light beam.
- the optical terminal may comprise an output optic, in particular of the telescope type, which is arranged to simultaneously transmit the useful laser beam and the jamming light beam in superposition. one with the other in this exit perspective.
- Such first embodiments for the optical terminal reduce its mass and its bulk, which is particularly advantageous for an optical terminal which is on board a satellite.
- the optical terminal may comprise two output optics which are separate, each output optic being able in particular to be of the telescope type, one such being arranged to transmit the useful laser beam and the other to transmit the jamming light beam.
- the optical terminal can further comprise at least one detector, called intrusion detector, which is adapted to reveal another optical receiver external to the optical terminal, called spy receiver and corresponding to Eve, if this spy receiver is located in a zone of the reception plane, called exclusion zone, which contains the destination zone while being larger than the latter.
- intrusion detector may include at least one of a radar system, an infrared detection system, and a LIDAR system.
- the optical terminal and the LIDAR system can share a output optics through which the useful laser beam and the radiation from the LIDAR system are transmitted, and possibly also the jamming light beam, and through which part of the radiation emitted by the LIDAR system is collected which has been retroreflected or backscattered by the receiver spy.
- Shared output optics means output optics from the terminal in which the beam(s) and the radiation of the LIDAR system are superimposed.
- a second aspect of the invention proposes a carrier vehicle such as a satellite, a land vehicle, a ship, an aircraft, a drone, or a high-altitude platform station, commonly designated by HAPS for “High- Altitude Platform Station” in English, this carrier comprising an optical terminal which conforms to the first aspect of the invention, including its improvements, and which is on board the carrier.
- the invention then makes it possible to improve the level of security of so-called downlink communications in the case of transmissions from the satellite to the land vehicle, ship, aircraft, drone, or the high altitude platform station, or so-called uplink communications in the case of transmissions from the land vehicle, ship, aircraft, drone, or the high altitude platform station to the satellite.
- a third aspect of the invention proposes a transmission station, in particular such a station which is fixed on the surface of the Earth, this transmission station comprising an optical terminal which conforms to the first aspect of the invention, including including its improvements.
- the invention makes it possible to improve the level of security of uplink communications from the transmission station to a satellite.
- a fourth aspect of the invention proposes a laser signal communication system comprising an optical terminal which conforms to the first aspect of the invention, a recipient receiver which is external to the optical terminal, and means for revealing a receiver spy, which is external to the optical terminal and to the recipient receiver, if this spy receiver is located in the exclusion zone.
- the system may include means for preventing any spy receiver from being in the exclusion zone. Then, the superposition of the useful laser beam and the jamming light beam presents values of the signal-to-noise ratio, for the useful signals, at any point of the reception plane outside the exclusion zone , which are all lower than an additional limit value, this additional limit value being lower than the limit value relating to the destination zone.
- a fifth aspect of the invention proposes a method of transmitting useful signals between an optical terminal which conforms to the first aspect of the invention, and which is the transmitter of the useful signals, and a recipient receiver which is external to the optical terminal, and to which the useful signals are intended. According to this process:
- the useful laser beam is emitted in the direction of the destination receiver so that this destination receiver is inside the destination zone;
- the jamming light beam is emitted by the optical terminal so that the useful laser beam is superimposed on the jamming light beam.
- the jamming light beam can be activated before the transmission of useful signals begins, then maintained until after an interruption of this transmission.
- the optical terminal can be on board a satellite which is in orbit around the Earth, and the recipient receiver can be part of a terrestrial receiving station fixed, or may be on board a vehicle or vessel that is on the surface of the Earth, or on board an aircraft, drone or high-altitude platform station, or may be a part of portable equipment for a user who is on the Earth's surface.
- the optical terminal may be part of a fixed terrestrial transmission station, or may be on board a vehicle or vessel which is at the surface of the Earth, or on board an aircraft, drone or high-altitude platform station, or may be part of portable equipment for a user who is on the surface of the Earth .
- the recipient receiver can then be embarked on board a satellite which is in orbit around the Earth.
- the method can be combined with the use of at least one intrusion detector to reveal a spy receiver which is external to the optical terminal and to the recipient receiver, if this spy receiver is located in the exclusion zone such than defined above.
- the intrusion detector may in particular be of one of the types mentioned above. It can be preferably located at the optical terminal which transmits the useful signals, or at the destination receiver. In the first case, the intrusion detector can be incorporated at least partly into the optical terminal emitting useful signals.
- FIG. 1 illustrates a possible implementation of the invention from a satellite
- FIG. 2 illustrates a first possible embodiment for an optical terminal which conforms to the invention
- FIG. 3 illustrates a second possible embodiment for an optical terminal which conforms to the invention.
- FIG. 4 is a diagram which shows illumination distributions used to implement the invention.
- FIG. 1 illustrates a use of the invention for transmitting data from a satellite 10, for example a low-altitude orbiting satellite, to a terrestrial receiving station 20, commonly called a ground station.
- the ground station 20 is fixed, but it can also be mobile, the communication receiver then being on board a carrier vehicle, whatever the land, nautical or air type of this carrier vehicle.
- the mode of communication is the transmission of laser signals in a free field, which is well known to those skilled in the art.
- the data to be transmitted are coded in the form of intensity modulations of a laser beam which is emitted from the satellite 10 towards the ground station 20, called the useful laser beam and designated by FU, thus constituting the laser signals which are transmitted.
- the satellite 10 is equipped with an optical terminal for communication by laser signals 1, and the ground station 20 is equipped with a recipient receiver 2.
- the constitutions and operations of the terminal 1 and the receiver 2 are known, if although the description which follows is limited to the modifications which are made according to the invention to the terminal 1 and to the receiver 2.
- the wavelength of the useful laser beam FU can be approximately 1.5 pm (micrometer).
- the invention can be applied to the transmission of any type of data from terminal 1 to receiver 2, including image data, quantum encryption keys, keys of other types of encryption, etc.
- the central direction of propagation of the useful laser beam FU is denoted AA.
- the useful laser beam FU has a small section at the satellite 10, corresponding to the exit pupil of the terminal 1, and has a larger section at the ground station 20.
- the beam useful laser FU produces a spot of illumination in a reception plane PR which is tangent to the surface of the Earth at the location of the ground station 20.
- the useful laser beam FU has a sufficient value of a signal-to-noise ratio at the location of the recipient receiver 2.
- the part of the illumination spot in which the signal-to-noise ratio is greater at a limit value which allows the successful detection of laser signals is called destination zone, and denoted ZD.
- Terminal 1 must then be controlled to point the laser beam useful FU so that the destination receiver 2 is inside the destination zone ZD at all times during data transmission.
- the destination zone ZD is larger than the space which is occupied by the destination receiver 2.
- a spy receiver 3 which would also be located in the zone destination ZD, although separated from the destination receiver 2, could detect simultaneously with the latter and successfully the useful laser signals transmitted by the terminal 1.
- the useful laser beam FU actually has a transverse extension which extends beyond the destination zone ZD, even if the spy receiver 3 is outside this destination zone ZD, it could still detect part useful laser signals, although with an error rate which increases as a function of the distance of the spy receiver 3 relative to the central direction of propagation A-A.
- the aim of the invention is then to reduce the possibility for the spy receiver 3, commonly called Eve, to successfully receive the data which are transmitted by the terminal 1, called Alice, to the recipient receiver 2, called Bob.
- the following description is provided assuming that the spy receiver 3 is in the reception plan PR, because this plan corresponds in practice to the maximum risk of intrusion by Eve, but those skilled in the art will be able to transpose this description to any level along the central propagation direction A-A at which spy receiver 3 might be located.
- the terminal 1 emits, at the same time as the useful laser beam FU, a jamming light beam FB so that the two beams FU and FB are superimposed in the reception plane PR.
- the two beams FU and FB have respective central directions of propagation which are almost identical, due to the distance of the terminal 1 from the destination receiver 2.
- the jamming light beam FB has the function of producing values of the signal-to-noise ratio outside the destination zone ZD, which are greater than the limit value which makes it possible to successfully detect the useful laser signals transmitted by the terminal 1.
- the jamming light beam FB In order for the jamming light beam FB to produce noise which cannot be optically filtered, it has an optical wavelength which is identical to that of the useful laser beam FU.
- the jamming light beam FB is also a laser beam.
- its wavelength is identical to that of the useful laser beam FU, and the power spectral of the jamming light beam FB is then equivalent to the output power of the light source which produces it, also commonly called intensity of the jamming light beam FB.
- the jamming light beam FB is produced by optical sources of other types, such as based on one or more light-emitting diodes, or LEDs, by example. So that the jamming light beam FB constitutes noise compared to the useful laser beam FU, the two beams FU and FB also have the same type of modulation.
- the two beams are modulated in intensity to transmit their respective radiation in the form of successive pulses.
- the modulation of the useful laser beam FU is produced to transfer the data to the destination receiver 2
- the modulation of the jamming light beam FB is produced independently of that of the useful laser beam FU, in order to produce jamming noise for the signals useful laser.
- the modulations of the jamming light beam FB can be random or pseudo-random.
- FIG. 2 symbolically shows a first possible design for the terminal 1, according to which the two beams FU and FB are transmitted to the outside by a common output optic 11.
- this output optics 1 1 can be a telescope.
- Two object focal planes PFu and PFB are associated with this output optics 11 using a beam splitter 12 to superimpose the beams FU and FB in the direction of the output optics 11.
- the beam splitter 12 can be a biprism with intensity division.
- a source of the useful laser beam FU designated by the reference 13a, is arranged to deliver this useful laser beam FU with a divergence from a first focus which is located in the focal plane PFu.
- the system 12a controls the modulation of the useful laser beam FU so that this beam carries the data to be transmitted. Due to the position of the first focus in the focal plane PFu, the useful laser beam FU is collimated downstream of the output optics 11, towards the destination receiver 2.
- a source of the jamming light beam FB designated by the reference 13b, is also arranged to deliver this jamming light beam FB with a divergence from a second focus which is located in front of the focal plane PFB, in the direction of the beam splitter 12.
- d designates the defocusing distance which is created between the second focus and the PFB focal plane, being adjustable.
- the jamming light beam FB can have, downstream of the output optics 1 1, a divergence which is adjustable, by controlling the defocusing distance d.
- the jamming light beam FB then produces in the reception plane PR an illumination spot which is larger than that of the useful laser beam FU, while being co-centered with the latter.
- Reference 12b designates a system for controlling the modulation of the jamming light beam FB, so that this beam FB carries a jamming signal, deliberately according to the invention.
- Different sources of random or pseudo-random noise can be used alternatively in system 12b depending on the spectral characteristics that are desired for this noise. Such noise sources are known to those skilled in the art, as are their implementations.
- [Fig. 2] is an example of a single-instrument embodiment of the invention.
- FIG. 3 shows in modular form a second possible design for the terminal 1, according to which the two beams FU and FB are transmitted to the outside by two output optics which are separated and juxtaposed, designated by 1 1 a and 1 1 b. These two output optics can each be a telescope.
- Terminal 1 then includes two transmission channels: transmission channel 1 a to transmit the useful laser beam FU, and transmission channel 1 b to transmit the jamming light beam FB.
- the two transmission channels 1 a and 1 b are supported by the chassis of satellite 10.
- the emission channel 1a may have a usual structure known to those skilled in the art, as briefly recalled now.
- the optical source 13a transmits the useful laser beam FU, modulated by the control system 12a in accordance with the data to be transmitted, to a point-ahead module, which is designated by the reference 14a.
- the beam FU as it emerges from the forward pointing module 14a is transmitted to the output optics 11a through a relay optics 15a and a main pointing system 16a.
- the relay optics 15a and the main pointing system 16a are included in a control loop to ensure that the useful laser beam FU continuously reaches the receiver 2.
- This control loop includes a tracking detector 18a, or “tracking detector” in English, and a vibration compensator 19a, commonly called “jitter controller” in English.
- the tracking detector 18a in combination with the vibration compensator 19a, controls the orientation of the main pointing system 16a.
- the vibration compensator 19a is itself supplied as input with detection signals which are delivered by an inertial sensor 20a, and which are representative of vibrations and changes in orientation which affect the chassis of the satellite 10. In this way, the destination zone ZD remains precisely and continuously on the destination receiver 2 despite the vibrations of the satellite 10.
- an optical communication receiver 17a can be arranged from an additional optical output of the relay optics 15a, to detect and processing optical communication signals which are transmitted by the receiver 2.
- the transmission channel 1 b which is dedicated to the jamming light beam FB, can have a simplified structure by being coupled to the transmission channel 1 a.
- the optical source 13b produces the jamming light beam FB, modulated by the control system 12b to produce the noise in accordance with the invention.
- the transmission channel 1b comprises a forward pointing module 14b, relay optics 15b, a main pointing system 16b, a vibration compensator 19b and inertial sensor 20b.
- transmission channel 1 b does not have a dedicated tracking detector, and the vibration compensator 19b receives as input the detection signals from the recipient receiver which are delivered by the tracking detector. tracking 18a, in addition to the detection signals which are delivered by the inertial sensor 20b.
- the jamming light beam FB is transmitted by the output optics 11 b according to the central direction of propagation A-A, so that the two beams FU and FB are co-centered in the reception plane PR due to the very great distance of this reception plan PR from terminal 1.
- FIG. 3 is an example of an embodiment of the invention with two separate instruments, one dedicated to producing the useful laser beam FU, and the other dedicated to producing the jamming light beam FB.
- the useful laser beam FU which can have a Gaussian or substantially Gaussian radial profile
- the jamming light beam FB which can also have a Gaussian or substantially Gaussian radial profile.
- the useful laser beam FU is emitted by the terminal 1 with an intensity which ensures that the The illumination of this useful laser beam FU in the illumination spot is much greater than the illumination of the ATM atmospheric noise.
- the noise is therefore mainly produced by the jamming light beam FB. For this reason, ATM atmospheric noise is no longer mentioned in the following.
- the destination zone ZD can be defined by a minimum signal-to-noise ratio value for a receiver which is located inside it.
- this minimum value of the signal-to-noise ratio may correspond to a minimum acceptable reception error rate for a receiver which is located anywhere within this destination zone ZD.
- the destination zone ZD Due to the symmetry around the central direction of propagation AA, the destination zone ZD is a disk or more generally a portion of surface which is limited by an ellipse, inside the reception plane PR.
- the destination zone ZD can be defined by a minimum value of the signal-to-noise ratio which is equal to 1.0.
- the circle or ellipse which then constitutes the peripheral border of the destination zone ZD corresponds to the points of the reception plane PR where the two beams FU and FB have the same illuminance value, as shown in [Fig. 4],
- the description is continued assuming that the destination zone ZD is a disk, it being understood that those skilled in the art will be able to transpose the elements and characteristics described in the case of a destination zone ZD of elliptical shape.
- the improvement which is now described aims to ensure that the spy receiver 3 cannot access the data transmitted by the terminal 1 to the recipient receiver 2, with an additional security measure.
- an exclusion zone ZE is provided in the reception plane PR, which is larger than the destination zone ZD, and outside of which the signal-to-noise ratio is further reduced compared to its value at the border of the destination zone ZD.
- the limiting value of the signal-to-noise ratio which is produced on the border of the destination zone ZD guarantees that the destination receiver 2 can detect the transmitted signals with a sufficiently low error rate.
- This limit value is denoted SNRD.
- the signal-to-noise ratio is therefore greater than this SNRD limit value at any point inside the destination zone ZD.
- the signal-to-noise ratio is less than an additional limit value, denoted SNRE, at any point of the reception plane PR which is outside the exclusion zone ZE.
- the additional limit value SNRE is therefore produced on the peripheral limit of the exclusion zone ZE.
- the limit value SNRD is greater than the additional limit value SNRE, and the difference between the two constitutes the additional security which is provided for the confidentiality of the transmitted data.
- the transmission system between the terminal 1 and the receiver 2 can be provided with means of preventing entry of the spy receiver 3 into this exclusion zone.
- Such means of prevention can have any form, such as isolation barriers for example.
- the transmission system between the terminal 1 and the receiver 2 can be provided with at least one intrusion detector 30 which is capable of revealing the spy receiver 3 as soon as the latter is located in the detection zone.
- ZE exclusion The ZE exclusion zone is shown in [Fig. 1 ] and [Fig. 4],
- the intrusion detector 30 can be of any type effective in revealing the presence of a spy receiver inside the exclusion zone ZE. It can be located near the destination receiver 2, or on board the satellite 10 as shown in [Fig. 1 ], possibly being at least partly incorporated into terminal 1. Alternatively, the intrusion detector 30 can be located at a distance from the receiver 2 and the terminal 1, for example by being on board an aircraft and pointed towards the exclusion zone ZE. Such an intrusion detector 30 may consist of one or more radar system(s), one or several infrared detection system(s), or one or more LIDAR system(s), for “Light Detection And Ranging” in English, or light detection and ranging system(s).
- Such a LIDAR system emits radiation in the direction of the exclusion zone ZE, and part of this radiation which has been retroreflected or backscattered by the spy receiver 3, if the latter is inside the exclusion zone ZE , is detected and analyzed, in particular to obtain information on the distance at which the spy receiver 3 is located.
- the operation of such a LIDAR system is assumed to be known, so that it is not necessary to repeat it here.
- this LIDAR system can be associated with a scanning system, so that the search and intrusion detection which are produced by the LIDAR operation allow surveillance of the entire exclusion zone ZE.
- the satellite 10 may have the mission of transmitting confidential data successively to several recipient receivers 2 which are located at different locations on the Earth.
- the same LIDAR system can be used for all these receivers, successively while the data concerned is transmitted to each recipient receiver 2.
- FIG. 3 shows a combination in which the LIDAR system of the intrusion detector 30 is integrated into the terminal 1.
- the radiation that is emitted by the LIDAR system is denoted by R in this figure.
- the radiation which is emitted towards the outside by the LIDAR system can be transmitted by the output optics 1 1 or 1 1 a.
- the LIDAR system can be coupled to the pointing of the useful laser beam FU, in a manner similar to that which was described above for emission channel 1 b in [Fig. 3].
- a scanning system can also be arranged within terminal 1, on a portion of the transmission channel which is dedicated exclusively to the LIDAR system, in order to produce a scan of the exclusion zone ZE by the radiation of the system LIDAR.
- the Euo value can be adjusted either at the laser source 13a which produces the useful laser beam FU, by selecting an output power value for this laser source, corresponding to the intensity of the beam FU, or by using an optical attenuator which is located between the output of the laser source 13a and the output optics 1 1 or 1 1 a of the terminal 1 which is used to transmit the useful laser beam FU to the outside.
- the EBO value can be adjusted either at the level of the light source 13b which produces the jamming light beam FB, by selecting a power value output for this light source, corresponding to the intensity of the beam FB, or by using another optical attenuator which is located between the output of the light source 13b and the output optics 11 or 11b of the terminal 1 which is used to transmit the jamming light beam FB to the outside.
- the four parameters Euo, wu, EBO and WB can be adjusted to produce the limit value SNRD of the signal-to-noise ratio on the peripheral border of the destination zone ZD, and simultaneously the additional limit value SNRE on the peripheral border of the ZE exclusion zone.
- the value of Euo is much higher than the value of EBO, and the value of wu is lower than the value of WB.
- the signal-to-noise ratio as perceived by the recipient receiver 2 is directly the EUO/EBO quotient, and can be taken for the SNRD limit value.
- the value of the signal-to-noise ratio at the peripheral border of the exclusion zone ZE, that is to say the additional limit value SNRE, is then Eu(rE)/EB(rE), where TE is the radius of the peripheral border of the ZE exclusion zone. He then comes
- the radius TE of the exclusion zone ZE is selected first, in particular according to the spatial coverage of the intrusion detection means 30, or according to the prevention measures which are used to avoid the entry of the spy receiver 3 inside the exclusion zone ZE.
- the limit value SNRD so that the recipient receiver 2 detects the useful laser signals with an acceptable error rate, the additional limit value SNRE to guarantee a sufficiently high error rate at the peripheral border of the exclusion zone ZE, and the radius wu of the useful laser beam FU in the reception plane PR, in particular as a function of the precision of the pointing of the terminal 1, are also selected as inputs to the parameterization.
- the value to adopt for the radius of the jamming light beam FB is: w B designates the natural logarithm function, or “natural log function” in English.
- This value for the radius WB of the jamming light beam FB can in particular be produced by adjusting the defocusing distance d of the light source 13b in the embodiment of [Fig. 2],
- the value of the WB radius can be achieved by adjusting a defocus of the relay optics 15b.
- the invention can be reproduced by modifying secondary aspects thereof compared to the detailed description which has just been provided above. Such modifications may depend on the application considered and its specific characteristics.
- the radius of the destination zone ZD or that wu of the useful laser beam FU in the reception plane PR can be chosen all the greater as the destination receiver 2 is mobile with a high speed.
- electronic or optical components may be used to replace the components mentioned, when they have functions equivalent to those of the latter, or whose combination of functions reproduces the operation described.
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Applications Claiming Priority (2)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
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FR2208664A FR3139258A1 (fr) | 2022-08-30 | 2022-08-30 | Terminal optique de communication par signaux laser |
PCT/FR2023/051216 WO2024047301A1 (fr) | 2022-08-30 | 2023-07-28 | Terminal optique de communication par signaux laser |
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EP4356549B1 EP4356549B1 (fr) | 2025-01-15 |
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EP1743271B1 (fr) * | 2004-03-05 | 2012-01-18 | Seknion, Inc. | Procede et dispositif permettant d'ameliorer l'efficacite et la precision de systemes rfid |
WO2006038660A1 (fr) * | 2004-10-06 | 2006-04-13 | Matsushita Electric Industrial Co., Ltd. | Système de communication de données |
IL208830A (en) * | 2010-10-20 | 2016-08-31 | Krupkin Vladimir | Laser Disorder |
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FR3139258A1 (fr) | 2024-03-01 |
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