Optical Devices and Communication
Optical Devices and Communication
Desirable attributes
Receiver/ demodulator
Decoder
Receiver
Most commonly, optical elements (optical fiber, optical amplifiers) are used in transmission links
Known as opto -electronic networks (OEO) Switching still done electronically No pure optical networks at present All-optical switching is a laboratory project at present, though opto -mechanical systems exist which use flipping mirrors
Use waveguides (in the form of optical fiber) to carry the data-bearing waves.
Optical
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Electronic
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Wireless
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Advantages Cost-effective bandwidth Noise isolation Security Smaller physical presence Readily up gradable
Drivers Demand for bandwidth Commoditization of optical networking components Reduced number of components Shorter service contracts Promise of rapid provisioning
Advantages
Cost-effective bandwidth
Above a certain threshold, price per unit of bandwidth is lower For very high bandwidths (~Gbit/second and higher) and even relatively short distances (~100 m), optical fiber is usually the only practical choice
Noise isolation
Optical fibers are not affected by electrical noise-producing sources
Can be used in environments where adequate shielding of electrical cables would be difficult or impossible ( Power House)
Advantages (continued)
Greater security
Optical fiber does not emit electromagnetic radiation which can be intercepted
Much more secure than many other types of wiring, such as category 5 untwisted pair used for Ethernet applications
Advantages (continued)
Ready upgrade path
In most cases, increased bandwidth can be had by installing new optical multiplexing equipment
Disadvantages
Higher cost per meter Greater difficulty in splicing and maintenance
Technicians need to be retrained
Drivers
Huge demand for bandwidth
Developments such as more video on Internet and anticipated use of Internet for video delivery in future will require optical connections to or close to homes
Reduced number of components means network simplification and equipment consolidation Shorter service contracts implies faster depreciation and more rapid replacement of equipment with newer technology
In 1954, Dutch scientist Abraham Van Heel and British scientist Harold. H. Hopkins separately wrote papers on imaging bundles
Van Heel had idea of cladding bare fiber with material of lower refractive index
In 1956, Narinder S. Kapany of Imperial College in London invented glass-coated glass rod, coined term fiber optics
Not suited for communications Applications in fiberscopes
1962 lasers operating on semiconductor chips 1964 C. K. Kao identifies that maximum loss of ~20 db/km needed for communications
Corresponds to 1% of energy left after 1 km Existing glasses not transparent enough Speculated that losses of 1000 db/km result of impurities in glass
1973 Navy installs fiber-optic telephone link on a ship In 1975, US Government links computers in the NORAD headquarters at Cheyenne Mountain using fiber optics to reduce interference In 1977, first optical telephone communication system installed
1.5 miles long, under downtown Chicago Each optical fiber carried the equivalent of 672 voice channels
Speed history
1790 5 bits/sec 1977 44.7 Megabits/sec 1982 400 Megabits/sec 1986 1.7 Gigabits/sec 1993 10 Gigabits/sec 1996 1 Terabit/sec 2002 3 Terabits/sec
Comparison: entire worlds telephone traffic ~ 5 Tb/sec Maximum capability: estimated to be 100 Tb/sec per fiber
2.5
SONET ERA
2 1.5 1 0.5 0 1980
WDM ERA
OC-192, 160
OC-192, 80 135 Mbps 565 Mbps 1982 1984 1986 1988 1.7 Gbps OC-48 1990 1992 1994 1996 1998 2000 2002 OC-192, 32
Year
OC-24
OC-48 OC-96 OC-192
1244.16
2488.32 4976.64 9953.28
Parts of a pulse
Information content
Sampling
Digitizing (quantizing)
Effect of quantizing
8 bits/ sample
4 bits/ sample
3 bits/ sample
2 bits/ sample
Source: U of Waterloo
Multiplexing
Definition: It is a technique that allows the simultaneous transmission of multiple signals across a single data link. A Multiplexer (MUX) is a device that combines several signals into a single signal. A Demultiplexer (DEMUX) is a device that performs the inverse operation.
Types of Multiplexing
Multiplexing FDM TDM WDM
FDM
In FDM signals generated by each device modulate different carrier frequencies. These modulated signals are combined into a single composite signal that can be transported by the link. Carrier frequencies are separated by enough bandwidth to accommodate the modulated signal. These bandwidth ranges are the channels through which various signals travel. Channels must separated by strips of unused bandwidth (guard bands) to prevent signal overlapping.
FDM
In FDM, signals are modulated onto separate carrier frequencies using either AM or FM modulation.
WDM
Wave-division multiplexing is conceptually the same as FDM, except that multiplexing and demultiplexing involve light signals transmitted through fiber-optic channels. The purpose is to combine multiple light sources into one single light at the multiplexer and do the reverse at the demultiplexer. Combining and splitting of light sources are easily handled by a prism.
WDM
Information content
Shannon showed that the capacity in bits/second of an additive white Gaussian noise channel is given by the famous Tuller-Shannon formula: C = BW log2 (1 + S/N)
BW = transmission bandwidth S/N = signal-to-noise ratio
This capacity only available with optimal encoding Note that bandwidth cannot be larger than transmission frequency, and typically is much smaller
Optical systems typically operate at frequencies of ~200 THz, so even a bandwidth of 1% of that is 2 THz, and with S/N of 100 gives capacity ~ 20 x 1012 bits/second Electronic systems, operating at 30 GHz or so are limited to about 3 x 109 bits/second
Light as an EM Wave
One way of thinking about light is to conceive of it as an electromagnetic wave just like a radio wave Light and radio waves are not really like one another. They are exactly the same thing! The only difference is the wavelength
EM Spectrum
Field distributions in plane E&M waves Electric and magnetic fields are orthogonal to each other and to the direction of propagation Z
EM Wave
As the electromagnetic wave moves, the fields oscillate in direction and in strength (E & M fields oscillate in phase) EM wave motion is at 90 (transverse) to the direction of wave travel The rate of oscillation is the frequency of the wave The distance traveled during one period of oscillation is the wavelength
EM Wave
Amplitude Fluctuation in an Electromagnetic Wave Here both the electric field and the magnetic field are shown as a single field oscillating about a locus of points which forms the line of travel.
EM Wave
We might visualize a particle or ray of light traveling through space as two interlocking force fields (electric and magnetic) These fields center on a point (over time this is of course a line in the direction of propagation) and decay exponentially as we move away from that point (or line).