Patents by Inventor Mark W. Roberts
Mark W. Roberts 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).
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Patent number: 8068740Abstract: In various embodiments, a secure optical communication system is disclosed. Such a system may include a photon-pair generation circuit configured to generate pairs of photons with each photon pair including a first-channel photon and a second-channel photon, a transmitting circuit configured to receive first-channel photons, and modulate the first-channel photons according to a stream of data using a first optical circulator to produce first-modulated photons, and a receiving circuit configured to receive second-channel photons, pass the second-channel photons through a complementary optical circulator to produce second modulated photons, and detect relative timing between the first-modulated photons and the second modulated photons to recover the stream of data.Type: GrantFiled: July 29, 2008Date of Patent: November 29, 2011Assignee: The United States of America as represented by Secretary of the NavyInventors: Mark W. Roberts, Markham E. Lasher
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Patent number: 7822342Abstract: An optical communication system is provided. In one embodiment, a source creates a multiplicity of photon pairs, with each photon pair comprising a first photon and a second photon. The first photon is sent to a transmitter, and either remains in the transmitter or is transmitted by the transmitter to a receiver. The second photon is sent to the receiver. Data is decoded by determining a polarization direction and a time of detection of any photon pairs detected at the receiver.Type: GrantFiled: March 20, 2007Date of Patent: October 26, 2010Assignee: The United States of America as represented by the Secretary of the NavyInventors: Mark W. Roberts, Markham E. Lasher
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Patent number: 7589662Abstract: A method of determining a radar receiver path, comprising the steps of: obtaining a transmitter position; obtaining a target position and velocity; obtaining a radar receiver position and velocity; determining a transmitter aspect angle gradient, a transmitter aspect angle time derivative and a transmitter co-state vector time derivative; determining a target aspect angle gradient, a target aspect angle time derivative and a target co-state vector time derivative; generating a radar platform heading variable, and a group of differential variables over a defined time span; inputting the group of differential variables into a differential equation solver; receiving a group of possible headings for the radar receiver path; and finding an optimum radar receiver path from the group of possible headings.Type: GrantFiled: June 20, 2007Date of Patent: September 15, 2009Assignee: The United States of America as represented by the Secretary of the NavyInventors: Douglas S. Hulbert, Ayax D. Ramirez, Stephen D. Russell, Randy L. Shlmabukuro, Mark W. Roberts
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Patent number: 7330653Abstract: A Quantum Dense Coding System. The system includes a source, a transmitter and a receiver. The source is capable of down-converting a pump photon into a signal photon and an idler photon and outputting probability amplitudes, the signal photon and the idler photon, wherein the signal photon and the idler photon have an equal probability of outputting to a transmission channel and a reception channel. The transmitter is capable of receiving probability amplitudes, signal photons and idler photons from the transmission channel; and selectively changing vertical and horizontal phases of probability amplitudes of signal photons and idler photons; and outputting probability amplitudes, signal photons and idler photons. The receiver is capable of receiving probability amplitudes, signal photons and idler photons from the reception channel and the transmitter; and identifying vertical and horizontal phase changes created by the transmitter. A method for the system is also described.Type: GrantFiled: November 15, 2004Date of Patent: February 12, 2008Assignee: United States of America as represented by the Secretary of the NavyInventors: Mark W. Roberts, Markham E. Lasher
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Patent number: 7302187Abstract: A system parametrically down-converts a photon into a pair of first and second quantum-entangled photons. A transmitter is coupled to receive the first photon and includes an irreversible collapse event device for collapsing the quantum-entangled state of each photon in the pair. The collapse is caused by attempting to detect the first photon at the transmitter. Because of quantum-entanglement, collapse of the first photon collapses the second photon of the pair. The transmitter can also be used to not cause the collapse. A receiver includes polarization detectors to detect whether the transmitter has collapsed or left uncollapsed the quantum-entangled state of the photon pair. Causing or not causing the collapse can be used for communication. Every down-converted photon can be used for communication, even though few of the photons actually leave the source and reach the transmitter. This allows communication with a minimal number of transmitted photons.Type: GrantFiled: December 8, 2004Date of Patent: November 27, 2007Assignee: United States of America as represented by the Secretary of the NavyInventors: Mark W. Roberts, Markham E. Lasher
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Patent number: 7289738Abstract: A communication system employs quantum entanglement by projecting photons through a nonlinear crystal. Some become parametrically down-converted into signal and idler photon pairs. The signal photons are projected to a receiver and the idler photons to a transmitter. The transmitter operator can alter the time width and a majority of the center wavelengths of the idler photons via a collapse event in the transmitter. Because of quantum entanglement, a corresponding change in the time width and center wavelengths of the signal photons as received at the receiver results. The purposeful causation of the collapse event or a lack of such purposeful causation can be used for binary communication. In addition, the sensing of an atmospheric condition may be performed by equating changes in received signal photon characteristics with changes in collapse conditions in the atmosphere.Type: GrantFiled: November 10, 2003Date of Patent: October 30, 2007Assignee: United States of America as represented by the Secretary of the NavyInventors: Mark W. Roberts, Markham E. Lasher
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Patent number: 6859189Abstract: The fast switching multifunction antenna of the present invention is a variable length antenna that may be switched to provide the equivalent function of a broadband antenna. The variable length antenna quasi-continuously transmits or receives signals at a plurality of frequencies by changing the effective length of the antenna using a variety of switching mechanisms. The present invention may comprise a plurality of antenna segments, a plurality of selectively actuable switches for interconnecting the antenna segments, and a switching mechanism operably coupled to the plurality of selectively actuable switches for switching them at a switching rate that is greater than twice the highest frequency to be transmitted or received. The switching rate will be fast enough to allow the antenna to sample the highest frequency and all of the required lower frequencies within the desired frequency range without the loss of information at any frequency.Type: GrantFiled: February 26, 2002Date of Patent: February 22, 2005Assignee: The United States of America as represented by the Secretary of the NavyInventors: Ayax D. Ramirez, Stephen D. Russell, Mark W. Roberts
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Patent number: 6833917Abstract: An electrically adjustable spectrometer uses collimated, P-polarized light made incident on a surface of an optically transparent liquid crystal input material. The material transmits the light to a boundary surface between the input material and an output optically transparent material. The input material is preferably highly dispersive, making Snell component values at the boundary surface markedly different for different wavelengths. The output material is preferably of low dispersion and high birefringence. Only one wavelength at the boundary surface has a Snell component value tangent to its corresponding index surface in the output section. Within this section, the ray vector for this wavelength is parallel to the boundary surface. Because optical energy propagates in the ray vector direction, only the narrow range of wavelengths having ray vectors substantially parallel to the boundary surface reach an output of the device.Type: GrantFiled: September 3, 2003Date of Patent: December 21, 2004Assignee: The United States of America as represented by the Secretary of the NavyInventor: Mark W. Roberts
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Patent number: 6618142Abstract: A spectrometer uses collimated, P-polarized light made incident on a surface of an optically transparent material at angle &thgr;INC. The material transmits the light which reaches a boundary surface between the input material and an output optically transparent material. The input material is preferably highly dispersive, making Snell component values at the boundary surface markedly different for different wavelengths. The output material is preferably of low dispersion and high birefringence. Only one wavelength at the boundary surface has a Snell component value tangent to its corresponding index surface in the output section. Within this section, the ray vector for this wavelength is parallel to the boundary surface. Because optical energy propagates in the ray vector direction, only the narrow range of wavelengths having ray vectors substantially parallel to the boundary surface reach an output surface of the device. This narrow range of wavelengths comprises the passband incident on a detector.Type: GrantFiled: June 26, 2001Date of Patent: September 9, 2003Assignee: The United States of America as represented by the Secretary of the NavyInventor: Mark W. Roberts