1,385 research outputs found
A survey on OFDM-based elastic core optical networking
Orthogonal frequency-division multiplexing (OFDM) is a modulation technology that has been widely adopted in many new and emerging broadband wireless and wireline communication systems. Due to its capability to transmit a high-speed data stream using multiple spectral-overlapped lower-speed subcarriers, OFDM technology offers superior advantages of high spectrum efficiency, robustness against inter-carrier and inter-symbol interference, adaptability to server channel conditions, etc. In recent years, there have been intensive studies on optical OFDM (O-OFDM) transmission technologies, and it is considered a promising technology for future ultra-high-speed optical transmission. Based on O-OFDM technology, a novel elastic optical network architecture with immense flexibility and scalability in spectrum allocation and data rate accommodation could be built to support diverse services and the rapid growth of Internet traffic in the future. In this paper, we present a comprehensive survey on OFDM-based elastic optical network technologies, including basic principles of OFDM, O-OFDM technologies, the architectures of OFDM-based elastic core optical networks, and related key enabling technologies. The main advantages and issues of OFDM-based elastic core optical networks that are under research are also discussed
Impact of 4D channel distribution on the achievable rates in coherent optical communication experiments
We experimentally investigate mutual information and generalized mutual
information for coherent optical transmission systems. The impact of the
assumed channel distribution on the achievable rate is investigated for
distributions in up to four dimensions. Single channel and wavelength division
multiplexing (WDM) transmission over transmission links with and without inline
dispersion compensation are studied. We show that for conventional WDM systems
without inline dispersion compensation, a circularly symmetric complex Gaussian
distribution is a good approximation of the channel. For other channels, such
as with inline dispersion compensation, this is no longer true and gains in the
achievable information rate are obtained by considering more sophisticated
four-dimensional (4D) distributions. We also show that for nonlinear channels,
gains in the achievable information rate can also be achieved by estimating the
mean values of the received constellation in four dimensions. The highest gain
for such channels is seen for a 4D correlated Gaussian distribution
Phase-coherent lightwave communications with frequency combs
Fiber-optical networks are a crucial telecommunication infrastructure in
society. Wavelength division multiplexing allows for transmitting parallel data
streams over the fiber bandwidth, and coherent detection enables the use of
sophisticated modulation formats and electronic compensation of signal
impairments. In the future, optical frequency combs may replace multiple lasers
used for the different wavelength channels. We demonstrate two novel signal
processing schemes that take advantage of the broadband phase coherence of
optical frequency combs. This approach allows for a more efficient estimation
and compensation of optical phase noise in coherent communication systems,
which can significantly simplify the signal processing or increase the
transmission performance. With further advances in space division multiplexing
and chip-scale frequency comb sources, these findings pave the way for compact
energy-efficient optical transceivers.Comment: 17 pages, 9 figure
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