Patents Assigned to Fiber Optic Systems Technology
  • Patent number: 7189959
    Abstract: Closely spaced conventional optical fibers are arranged in a grid placed between a first surface and a second surface. A penetrating impact onto the first surface results in a hole of a size proportional to the diameter and velocity of the impacting object. The size and shape of the debris plume that travels between the first and second surfaces is also proportional to the diameter and velocity of the impacting object. If the debris plume is sufficiently energetic, a number of the fibers in the grid are broken. The size and shape of the area defined by the broken fibers can be determined simply by determining which fibers are no longer transmitting light. Analytical methods are then used to relate the extent of the damaged area to the location of an MOD impact, the direction from which the impact occurred, and the size of the impacting object.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: March 18, 2005
    Date of Patent: March 13, 2007
    Assignee: Fiber Optic Systems Technology
    Inventors: W. Donald Morison, Roderick C. Tennyson, Thierry Cherpillod
  • Patent number: 6870975
    Abstract: A fiber optic sensor includes two reflective elements in series. The first reflective element is formed as a partially mirrored surface on the end of a single-mode optical fiber lead which is bonded into a ferrule. A sleeve is used to join the ferrule to a second ferrule which is turn is bonded to a length of single-mode optical fiber. The second reflective element is a partially mirrored surface on the cleaved end of the second fiber. The second fiber may be affixed to or embedded in a structure to be monitored and changes its optical path length in response to a condition of the structure. Light introduced into the sensor is reflected from the first or second reflective element and thus follows two optical paths. The path length difference between the two optical paths is twice the optical path length of the second fiber.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: November 14, 2001
    Date of Patent: March 22, 2005
    Assignee: Fiber Optic Systems Technology, Inc.
    Inventors: W. Don Morison, Gerald Manuelpillai, Roderick C. Tennyson, Thierry Cherpillod, Dominic Rouse
  • Patent number: 6813403
    Abstract: Brillouin scattering spectrum analysis is used to measure strain, displacement, temperature or other physical quantities at any location along an optical fiber attached to a structure. The fiber can be interrogated with different pulse widths for coarse and fine scans. The fiber can also have multiple sensors, either formed in a single fiber or branching off from a backbone fiber, in which case other segments of the fiber can be used for temperature compensation.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: May 17, 2002
    Date of Patent: November 2, 2004
    Assignee: Fiber Optic Systems Technology, Inc.
    Inventor: Roderick C. Tennyson
  • Patent number: 6804008
    Abstract: An interoferometric fiber optic sensing system uses three optical fibers. A sensing optical fiber is applied to a structure to be monitored to detect displacement or the like by changing its optical path length. A reference optical fiber has a fixed optical path length. An adjustable length optical fiber is controllably adjusted in its optical path length. The three optical fibers form optical paths whose light outputs are caused to interfere. The adjustable length optical fiber is adjusted until an interference fringe appears. The quantity to be detected is derived from the maximum of the interference fringe. Several sensing optical fibers can be multiplexed; by staggering their optical path lengths, their interference fringes can be separated sufficiently to resolve them.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: November 14, 2001
    Date of Patent: October 12, 2004
    Assignee: Fiber Optic Systems Technology, Inc.
    Inventors: W. Don Morison, Gerald Manuelpillai, Roderick C. Tennyson, Thierry Cherpillod, Dominic Rouse
  • Patent number: 6611007
    Abstract: A novel quantum well intermixing method for regionally modifying the bandgap properties of InGaAsP quantum well structures is disclosed. The method induces bandgap wavelength blue shifting and deep states for reducing carrier lifetime within InGaAsP quantum well structures. The novel quantum well intermixing technique is applied to the modulator section of an integrated DFB laser/electro-absorption modulator, wherein the modulator exhibits fast switching times with efficient optical coupling between the DFB laser and modulator region.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: May 9, 2002
    Date of Patent: August 26, 2003
    Assignee: Fiber Optic Systems Technology, Inc.
    Inventors: David A. Thompson, Brad J. Robinson, Gregory J. Letal, Alex S. W. Lee