Patents by Inventor Alan E. Johnson

Alan E. Johnson has filed for patents to protect the following inventions. This listing includes patent applications that are pending as well as patents that have already been granted by the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO).

  • Publication number: 20040126060
    Abstract: An athermal package for fiber photonic devices includes a ferrule to attach the optical fiber to the package. The ferrule has an opening to receive the optical fiber. The ferule is collapsed to attach the optical fiber to the athermal package. Alternatively, the athermal package uses adhesive bonds disposed in pockets of the package. The pockets have a narrow end and a wide end, with the narrow ends facing each other. The adhesive bonds are disposed in the pockets in contact the narrow ends of the pockets but not with the wide ends. The narrow ends physically confine the adhesive bonds so that if the bonds expand or contract due to environmental conditions (or the curing process), the adhesive either expands or contracts near the wide ends of the pockets. This allows the strain on the optical fiber segment between the bonds to remain substantially constant.
    Type: Application
    Filed: December 31, 2002
    Publication date: July 1, 2004
    Inventors: Alan E. Johnson, Frank D. Braun, Edward P. Donlon
  • Publication number: 20040086118
    Abstract: An optical signal may be encrypted and decrypted using an encoder and a matched decoder. In this way, an encoded signal may be retrieved using a decoder that matches the encoder. The encoder may alter the phase or amplitude of the signal.
    Type: Application
    Filed: October 31, 2002
    Publication date: May 6, 2004
    Inventors: John N. Sweetser, Alan E. Johnson, Anders Grunnet-Jepsen, Aaron R. Rickerson
  • Publication number: 20040018022
    Abstract: Multiple Bragg gratings are fabricated in a single planar lightwave circuit platform. The gratings have nominally identical grating spacing but different center wavelengths, which are produced using controlled photolithographic processes and/or controlled doping to control the effective refractive index of the gratings. The gratings may be spaced closer together than the height of the UV light pattern used to write the gratings.
    Type: Application
    Filed: July 24, 2002
    Publication date: January 29, 2004
    Inventors: Anders Grunnet-Jepsen, Alan E. Johnson, John N. Sweetser
  • Publication number: 20040013075
    Abstract: An optical data storage system directs a reference beam and a data beam to a storage material having an inhomogeneous linewidth. The data beam is modulated to contain data to be stored in the storage material. The reference beam and the data beam illuminate storage cells of the storage material, causing data to be stored. The reference beam and the data beam spatially scan the cells and are frequency swept during their respective spatial scans. Data is retrieved from the cells by illuminating the storage material with the reference beam to produce a reconstructed data beam. In an embodiment, the reference beam and the data beam overlap and illuminate the storage cells simultaneously. The reconstructed data beam is detected as a heterodyne signal produced by mixing the reconstructed data beam and the reference beam in a detector.
    Type: Application
    Filed: July 9, 2003
    Publication date: January 22, 2004
    Inventors: Alan E. Johnson, Eric S. Maniloff, Thomas W. Mossberg
  • Publication number: 20040013364
    Abstract: An athermal package for fiber photonic devices includes at least two bonding regions at each end of the optical fiber containing the photonic device. At each end of the optical fiber, the bonding region nearest the photonic device (i.e., the inner bonding region) has a width that is less than that of the other bonding region (i.e., the outer bonding region). The smaller widths of the inner bonding regions allow for relatively precise control of the positions on the optical fiber that the inner bonding regions are attached. The larger widths of the outer bonding regions help provide reliable attachments.
    Type: Application
    Filed: July 22, 2002
    Publication date: January 22, 2004
    Inventors: Alan E. Johnson, Edward P. Donlon, Frank D. Braun, Lap Van Hoang
  • Publication number: 20040008565
    Abstract: An optical data storage system directs a reference beam and a data beam to a storage material having an inhomogeneous linewidth. The data beam is modulated to contain data to be stored in the storage material. The reference beam and the data beam illuminate storage cells of the storage material, causing data to be stored. The reference beam and the data beam spatially scan the cells and are frequency swept during their respective spatial scans. Data is retrieved from the cells by illuminating the storage material with the reference beam to produce a reconstructed data beam. In an embodiment, the reference beam and the data beam overlap and illuminate the storage cells simultaneously. The reconstructed data beam is detected as a heterodyne signal produced by mixing the reconstructed data beam and the reference beam in a detector.
    Type: Application
    Filed: July 9, 2003
    Publication date: January 15, 2004
    Inventors: Alan E. Johnson, Eric S. Maniloff, Thomas W. Mossberg
  • Patent number: 6618342
    Abstract: An optical data storage system directs a reference beam and a data beam to a storage material having an inhomogeneous linewidth. The data beam is modulated to contain data to be stored in the storage material. The reference beam and the data beam illuminate storage cells of the storage material, causing data to be stored. The reference beam and the data beam spatially scan the cells and are frequency swept during their respective spatial scans. Data is retrieved from the cells by illuminating the storage material with the reference beam to produce a reconstructed data beam. In an embodiment, the reference beam and the data beam overlap and illuminate the storage cells simultaneously. The reconstructed data beam is detected as a heterodyne signal produced by mixing the reconstructed data beam and the reference beam in a detector.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 5, 1999
    Date of Patent: September 9, 2003
    Assignee: Intel Corporation
    Inventors: Alan E. Johnson, Eric S. Maniloff, Thomas W. Mossberg
  • Patent number: 6594421
    Abstract: Programmable waveguide coders are disclosed that include one or more corrugation segments and one or more spacer segments formed on or in a waveguide defined by a core in an electro-optic substrate. Each of the corrugation segments and the spacer segments are independently controllable with voltages applied to each segment's electrodes. The spacer segments permit application of a phase modulation to an input while the corrugation segments act as tunable gratings, wherein a center grating wavelength is tunable by applying a voltage to an electrode associated with the corrugation segment. In some embodiments, coders include only corrugation segments or only spacer segments. Such coders can be strain tuned or thermally tuned. The coders can be programmatically tuned to code or decode a time-wavelength code or other code.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: January 26, 2000
    Date of Patent: July 15, 2003
    Assignee: Intel Corporation
    Inventors: Alan E. Johnson, Eric S. Maniloff, Michael J. Munroe, Anders Grunnet-Jepsen, John N. Sweetser
  • Publication number: 20020176088
    Abstract: A mounting platform provides support and packaging for one or more fiber Bragg gratings and electronic circuitry (e.g., heaters, coolers, piezoelectric strain providers, temperature and strain sensors, feedback circuitry, control loops), which may be printed on or on the mounting platform, embedded in the mounting platform, or may be an “off-board” chip solution (e.g., the electronic circuitry may be attached to the mounting platform, but not formed on or defined on the mounting platform). The fiber Bragg gratings are held in close proximity to the electronic circuitry, which applies local and global temperature and/or strain variations to the fiber Bragg gratings to, for example, stabilize and/or tune spectral properties of the fiber Bragg gratings so that spatial variations in the fiber Bragg gratings that result from processing and manufacturing fluctuations and tolerances can be compensated for.
    Type: Application
    Filed: May 21, 2002
    Publication date: November 28, 2002
    Inventors: Alan E. Johnson, Anders Grunnet-Jepsen, Tsung-Ein Tsai, John N. Sweetser, Matthew Miller
  • Patent number: 6313771
    Abstract: Encoders and decoders for applying composite codes to optical data signals include encoders and decoders for applying both subcodes and supercodes. The subcodes have a duration selected as less than or equal to an interchip duration or a chip duration of the supercodes. The encoders and decoders (“coders”) include fiber Bragg gratings configured to encode or decode a subcode, a supercode, or a composite code. By coding with a subcode coder and a supercode coder, a coder is reconfigurable by selecting different subcodes or supercodes. Communication systems and methods using composite codes are also described.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: November 17, 1999
    Date of Patent: November 6, 2001
    Assignee: Templex Technology, Inc.
    Inventors: Michael J. Munroe, Alan E. Johnson, Anders Grunnet-Jepsen, Eric S. Maniloff, Thomas W. Mossberg, John N. Sweetser