Coherent and Nonlinear Lightwave CommunicationsThis is a practical source on recent developments in coherent and nonlinear lightwave communications. The book systematically presents up-to-date explanations of all the relevant physical principles and recent research in this emerging area. Providing an unparallelled engineering-level treatment (with 700 equations), this reference also describes the progression of coherent and nonlinear technology from yesterday's experimental field to today's practical applications tool. This work is intended as a tool for research telecommunication engineers, applications engineers working with broadband telecom systems and networks, and postgraduate students. |
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Page 148
... attenuation caused by the optical fiber loss in the preceding optical fiber section . At the same time , the transmission capacity limit caused by the dispersion basically is not changed by the optical in - line amplifiers . Beside the ...
... attenuation caused by the optical fiber loss in the preceding optical fiber section . At the same time , the transmission capacity limit caused by the dispersion basically is not changed by the optical in - line amplifiers . Beside the ...
Page 258
... attenuation , then the far - end cross - talk attenuation is relevant for unidirectional transmission , and the near - end cross - talk attenuation is relevant for bidirectional transmission . The far - end and near - end cross - talk ...
... attenuation , then the far - end cross - talk attenuation is relevant for unidirectional transmission , and the near - end cross - talk attenuation is relevant for bidirectional transmission . The far - end and near - end cross - talk ...
Page 263
... attenuation A2 can be now determined by A2 = -10 log [ P , ( 0 ) | P , 0 > 0 − P , ( 0 ) | P , o = 0 ° Ppo - ( 9.106 ) To find the attenuation coefficient A1 , we must solve ( 9.90b ) for these initial conditions : and P , ( 0 ) = Ppo ...
... attenuation A2 can be now determined by A2 = -10 log [ P , ( 0 ) | P , 0 > 0 − P , ( 0 ) | P , o = 0 ° Ppo - ( 9.106 ) To find the attenuation coefficient A1 , we must solve ( 9.90b ) for these initial conditions : and P , ( 0 ) = Ppo ...
Contents
Optical Transmitters for Coherent Lightwave Systems | 3 |
Coherent Optical Receiver Sensitivity | 15 |
61 | 31 |
Copyright | |
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amplification coefficient amplitude Brillouin scattering channels Chapter characteristics coherent detection coherent lightwave system coherent optical receiver components corresponding detection scheme digit interval dispersion DPSK electric field energy equal equation erbium-doped fiber amplifiers error probability evaluated Figure filter frequency shift Gaussian Hence heterodyne detection homodyne detection IEEE IEEE/OSA incoming optical signal influence input laser amplifiers length Lett lightwave communications lightwave systems Lightwave Techn loss modulating signal multichannel nonlinear effects nonlinear lightwave system optical amplifiers optical oscillator optical power optical transmitter optical-fiber parameters phase modulation phase noise phase shift photodetector photodiode photons polarization propagation PSK signals pump signal R₁ Raman amplification Raman amplifiers ratio realization receiver sensitivity refractive index resonator scattered signal self-phase modulation semiconductor laser signal power single-mode optical fiber soliton pulses soliton regime spectral linewidth spontaneous emission stimulated Raman scattering term thermal noise transmission system variance voltage width