Fiber Optics - University of Calgary
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Transcript Fiber Optics - University of Calgary
Fiber Optics: An Introduction
Carey Williamson
University of Calgary
1
Introduction
Optical
fiber makes possible the
transmission of digital data at several
gigabits per second (Gbps) over long
distances with very low error rates
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Optical Fiber
Manufactured
from refined glass
Very few impurities
Very thin (e.g., 8-12 microns for core)
Core is surrounded by cladding
Cladding
Core
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Fiber-based Transmission
Bits
are represented as pulses of light
Transmitted using lasers
Light pulses, once transmitted into the
core, continue to travel down the fiber,
according to the physical principle of
total internal reflection
Very little signal attenuation (loss)
4
Fiber Optic Transmission
Transmission
performed using laser
Usually
a fixed wavelength
Some are tunable to different wavelengths
Receiver
uses photo-electric diode to
detect incoming signals
Usually
a fixed wavelength
Some are tunable to different wavelengths
Optical-electrical
conversions required
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Fiber Optic Transmission
Can
transmit using several different
wavelengths on the same fiber
(monomode versus multimode fiber)
Called Wavelength Division
Multiplexing (WDM)
Same principle as Frequency Division
Multiplexing (FDM)
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Fiber Optics: Facts
Optical
fiber works best with
wavelengths of light around either 0.85,
1.3, or 1.5 microns
Each band has a theoretical bandwidth
of approximately 25 TeraHz
Current laser technology can achieve
several Gbps
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Fiber Optic Transmission
Various
physical layer phenomena
serve to constrain the current
achievable bandwidth on optical fiber
Dispersion:
modal, chromatic, material
Absorption
Attenuation
Repeaters
or amplifiers are needed to
facilitate long range transmission
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Summary
Optical
fiber offers immense bandwidth
B-ISDN/ATM assumes fiber optic
based transmission at the physical layer
International standard for fiber-based
transmission: SONET
(Synchronous Optical Network)
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