| Literature DB >> 26691731 |
Xing Chen1, Jinlong Lu1, Yifan Cui1, Jian Zhang1, Xing Lu2, Xusheng Tian3, Cheng Ci3, Bo Liu3, Hong Wu3, Tingsong Tang4, Kebin Shi2, Zhigang Zhang1.
Abstract
Precision time synchronization between two remote sites is desired in many applications such as global positioning satellite systems, long-baseline interferometry, coherent radar detection and fundamental physics constant measurements. The recently developed frequency dissemination technologies based on optical fiber link have improved the transfer instability to the level of 10(-19)/day at remote location. Therefore it is possible to keep clock oscillation at remote locations continuously corrected, or to reproduce a "virtual" clock on the remote location. However the initial alignment and the correction of 1 pps timing signal from time to time are still required, besides the highly stabilized clock frequency transfer between distant locations. Here we demonstrate a time synchronization based on an ultra-stable frequency transfer system via 120-km commercial fiber link by transferring an optical frequency comb. Both the phase noise compensation in frequency dissemination and temporal basis alignment in time synchronization were implemented by a feed-forward digital compensation (FFDC) technique. The fractional frequency instability was measured to be 6.18 × 10(-20) at 2000 s. The timing deviation of time synchronization was measured to be 0.6 ps in 1500 s. This technique also can be applied in multi-node fiber network topology.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26691731 PMCID: PMC4686909 DOI: 10.1038/srep18343
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1The schematic diagram of precise time synchronization and frequency transfer.
At the remote end, the atomic clock can be reproduced. DWDM: dense wavelength division multiplexing.
Figure 2The principle of feed-forward compensation system to synchronize frequency reference.
MLFL: mode locked fiber laser; FM: frequency multiplier; FLOM-PD20: Fiber loop optic microwave phase detector; MCU: microprocessor control unit; BS:beam splitter; PD: photo detector; EDFA: Erbium doped fiber amplifier; FD: frequency divider; DAQ: data acquisition; FRM: frequency recovery module; LPF: low pass filter.
Figure 3The principle of two-way fiber time transfer (TWFTT) system to synchronize the time references.
TIC: time interval counter; DFBL: distributed feedback laser; EOM: electro-optic modulator; SPGM: synchronization pulse generation module; PDCM: pulse delay control module; PGM: pulse generate module; OTM: optical transceiver module.
Figure 4Red line: fractional frequency stability of the 120 km free running fiber link (Π data), Blue line: frequency instability of H-maser; Black: modified ADEV of fractional frequency by averaging (overlapping Λ-type) calculation; Green: the instability (modified ADEV) of system background floor (replacing fiber link with 3 m long fiber).
Figure 5(a) The measured instability of the synchronization and stability of the time dissemination system with 12,000 sampling points at 0.333Hz sampling rate. The delay of fiber link and the time synchronization. The blue line is the accuracy of time synchronization. The red and black curves are the and the respectively. They are almost overlapped, showing the excellent synchronization; (b) Time deviation (TDEV) measures the instability of the timing transfer for with and without frequency stabilization.
Comparison of the time synchronization over fiber.
| Organization | Carrier | Fiber length (km) | Fractional frequency stability | Time jitter (TDEV) | Year | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 s | 1000 s | 100 s | 1000 s | ||||
| UP13/SYRTE | Optical frequency | 540 | ~2 × 10−14 | ~3 × 10−17 | ~7 ps | ~6 ps | 2013 |
| MPQ/PTB | Optical frequency | 1840 | 2.7 × 10−15 | — | — | — | 2013 |
| NPL | Comb | 86 | 5 × 10−15 | ~6 × 10−17 | — | — | 2011 |
| AGH Univ. Sci. & Techno. | Radio frequency | 60 | ~6 × 10−14 | ~9 × 10−16 | ~1.6 ps | ~0.7 ps | 2012 |
| This work | Comb | 120 | 8.21 × 10−16 | 1.48 × 10−19 | 1.6 ps | 0.7 ps | 2015 |