2,099 research outputs found
Information Transmission using the Nonlinear Fourier Transform, Part III: Spectrum Modulation
Motivated by the looming "capacity crunch" in fiber-optic networks,
information transmission over such systems is revisited. Among numerous
distortions, inter-channel interference in multiuser wavelength-division
multiplexing (WDM) is identified as the seemingly intractable factor limiting
the achievable rate at high launch power. However, this distortion and similar
ones arising from nonlinearity are primarily due to the use of methods suited
for linear systems, namely WDM and linear pulse-train transmission, for the
nonlinear optical channel. Exploiting the integrability of the nonlinear
Schr\"odinger (NLS) equation, a nonlinear frequency-division multiplexing
(NFDM) scheme is presented, which directly modulates non-interacting signal
degrees-of-freedom under NLS propagation. The main distinction between this and
previous methods is that NFDM is able to cope with the nonlinearity, and thus,
as the the signal power or transmission distance is increased, the new method
does not suffer from the deterministic cross-talk between signal components
which has degraded the performance of previous approaches. In this paper,
emphasis is placed on modulation of the discrete component of the nonlinear
Fourier transform of the signal and some simple examples of achievable spectral
efficiencies are provided.Comment: Updated version of IEEE Transactions on Information Theory, vol. 60,
no. 7, pp. 4346--4369, July, 201
Information Transmission using the Nonlinear Fourier Transform, Part I: Mathematical Tools
The nonlinear Fourier transform (NFT), a powerful tool in soliton theory and
exactly solvable models, is a method for solving integrable partial
differential equations governing wave propagation in certain nonlinear media.
The NFT decorrelates signal degrees-of-freedom in such models, in much the same
way that the Fourier transform does for linear systems. In this three-part
series of papers, this observation is exploited for data transmission over
integrable channels such as optical fibers, where pulse propagation is governed
by the nonlinear Schr\"odinger equation. In this transmission scheme, which can
be viewed as a nonlinear analogue of orthogonal frequency-division multiplexing
commonly used in linear channels, information is encoded in the nonlinear
frequencies and their spectral amplitudes. Unlike most other fiber-optic
transmission schemes, this technique deals with both dispersion and
nonlinearity directly and unconditionally without the need for dispersion or
nonlinearity compensation methods. This first paper explains the mathematical
tools that underlie the method.Comment: This version contains minor updates of IEEE Transactions on
Information Theory, vol. 60, no. 7, pp. 4312--4328, July 201
Information Transmission using the Nonlinear Fourier Transform, Part II: Numerical Methods
In this paper, numerical methods are suggested to compute the discrete and
the continuous spectrum of a signal with respect to the Zakharov-Shabat system,
a Lax operator underlying numerous integrable communication channels including
the nonlinear Schr\"odinger channel, modeling pulse propagation in optical
fibers. These methods are subsequently tested and their ability to estimate the
spectrum are compared against each other. These methods are used to compute the
spectrum of various signals commonly used in the optical fiber communications.
It is found that the layer-peeling and the spectral methods are suitable
schemes to estimate the nonlinear spectra with good accuracy. To illustrate the
structure of the spectrum, the locus of the eigenvalues is determined under
amplitude and phase modulation in a number of examples. It is observed that in
some cases, as signal parameters vary, eigenvalues collide and change their
course of motion. The real axis is typically the place from which new
eigenvalues originate or are absorbed into after traveling a trajectory in the
complex plane.Comment: Minor updates to IEEE Transactions on Information Theory, vol. 60,
no. 7, pp. 4329--4345, July 201
Upper Bound on the Capacity of a Cascade of Nonlinear and Noisy Channels
An upper bound on the capacity of a cascade of nonlinear and noisy channels
is presented. The cascade mimics the split-step Fourier method for computing
waveform propagation governed by the stochastic generalized nonlinear
Schroedinger equation. It is shown that the spectral efficiency of the cascade
is at most log(1+SNR), where SNR is the receiver signal-to-noise ratio. The
results may be applied to optical fiber channels. However, the definition of
bandwidth is subtle and leaves open interpretations of the bound. Some of these
interpretations are discussed.Comment: The main change is to define the noise as bandlimited already in (8)
rather than before (15). This serves to clarify subsequent step
Effects of dietary isoflavone-genistein on hematological and immunological parameters in pre-brood stock beluga, Huso huso
This study was carried out with the aim of detecting the dietary effects of isoflavone-genistein on hematological and immunological parameters in beluga, Huso huso in a 12-week feeding period. Five isonitrogenous (45% crude protein) and isoenergetic (19.5 MJ kg^-1) diets were formulated to contain four graded levels of isoflavone-genistein, namely 0, 0.2, 0.4, 0.8 and 1.6 g kg^-1 diet. Fish (initial average weight: 26.1 ± 1.8 kg) were stocked in ponds in groups of 3 and fed the experimental diets in triplicate. At the end of experiment, physiological indicators, including hematological and immunological parameters, such as red blood cell (RBC), white blood cell count (WBC), hematocrit (Ht), hemoglobin (Hb), lymphocyte, neutrophil, eosinophil, monocyte, haematological indices, lysozyme, total immunoglobulin (IgM) and complementary activities were determined. Results suggested that mean corpuscular hemoglobin concentration (MCHC) and values of neutrophil had significant differences between treatments. The activities of serum lysozyme, IgM, C3 and C4 were significantly influenced by the dietary genistein concentrations. Results indicated that genistein had significant effects on some hematological and immunological parameters in beluga
Brane gravity
We consider a brane world scenario in which the bulk action is assumed to
have the form of a generic function of the Ricci scalar and
derive the resulting Einstein field equations on the brane. In a constant
curvature bulk a conserved geometric quantity appears in the field equations
which can be associated with matter. We present cosmological and spherically
symmetric solutions by assuming specific forms for and show
that the former can explain an accelerated expanding universe while the latter
may account for galaxy rotation curves.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figures, to appear in EP
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