2,689 research outputs found
Current capacity limits and activities within the EU project MODE-GAP to overcome them
In this presentation we will discuss the implications of the so called Nonlinear Shannon Limit. We will compare technologies including new fibres for long haul transmission and techniques to expand the capacity of existing standard single mode fibres
On Statistical Aspects of Qjets
The process by which jet algorithms construct jets and subjets is inherently
ambiguous and equally well motivated algorithms often return very different
answers. The Qjets procedure was introduced by the authors to account for this
ambiguity by considering many reconstructions of a jet at once, allowing one to
assign a weight to each interpretation of the jet. Employing these weighted
interpretations leads to an improvement in the statistical stability of many
measurements. Here we explore in detail the statistical properties of these
sets of weighted measurements and demonstrate how they can be used to improve
the reach of jet-based studies.Comment: 29 pages, 6 figures. References added, minor modification of the
text. This version to appear in JHE
Qjets: A Non-Deterministic Approach to Tree-Based Jet Substructure
Jet substructure is typically studied using clustering algorithms, such as
kT, which arrange the jets' constituents into trees. Instead of considering a
single tree per jet, we propose that multiple trees should be considered,
weighted by an appropriate metric. Then each jet in each event produces a
distribution for an observable, rather than a single value. Advantages of this
approach include: 1) observables have significantly increased statistical
stability; and, 2) new observables, such as the variance of the distribution,
provide new handles for signal and background discrimination. For example, we
find that employing a set of trees substantially reduces the observed
fluctuations in the pruned mass distribution, enhancing the likelihood of new
particle discovery for a given integrated luminosity. Furthermore, the
resulting pruned mass distributions for (background) QCD jets are found to be
substantially wider than that for (signal) jets with intrinsic mass scales,
e.g. jets containing a W decay. A cut on this width yields a substantial
enhancement in significance relative to a cut on the standard pruned jet mass
alone. In particular the luminosity needed for a given significance requirement
decreases by a factor of two relative to standard pruning.Comment: Minor changes to match journal versio
Electronic impairment mitigation in optically multiplexed multicarrier systems
In order to improve the performance of optically multiplexed multicarrier systems with channel spacing equal to the symbol rate per carrier, we propose and systematically investigate an electronic signal processing technique to achieve near-interchannel crosstalk free and intersymbol-interference (ISI) free operation. We theoretically show that achieving perfect orthogonality between channels in these systems, together with ISI free operation as needed in generic communication systems, requires the shaping of the spectral profiles of not only the demultiplexing filter, but also the signal of each channel before demultiplexing. We develop a novel semianalytical method to quantitatively analyze the levels of residual crosstalk and ISI arising from nonideal system response in these systems. We show that by prefiltering the signal to ensure that the system impulse response before channel demultiplexing approaches the targeted condition, the residual crosstalk due to imperfect orthogonality can be significantly mitigated and the necessity for carrier phase control in single-quadrature format-based system can be relaxed. Further combining prefiltering and receiver-side postfiltering to adaptively trim the demultiplexing filter enhances the performance. The use of the combined digital signal processing (DSP) in coherent-detection quadrature phase-shifted keying (QPSK)-based optically multiplexed multicarrier system shows that this method outperforms conventional QPSK-based multicarrier system without DSP or with only receiver-side DSP, especially when the responses of the transmitter and the demultiplexing filter are not precisely designed and the sampling rate of the analogue-to-digital converter is not sufficiently high. In addition, the inclusion of ISI free operation, with this aspect similar to the reshaping method in conventional wavelength-division-multiplexing systems, allows the relaxation of the modulation bandwidth and chromatic dispersion compensation
Designs of coherent optical fast OFDM and performance comparison to conventional OFDM
We discuss practical designs of coherent optical fast OFDM, and compare the performance of this scheme to conventional OFDM to identify its suitable application scenarios
Nonlinear penalties in long-haul optical networks employing dynamic transponders
We report for the first time, the impact of cross phase modulation in WDM optical transport networks employing dynamic 28 Gbaud PM-mQAM transponders (m = 4, 16, 64, 256). We demonstrate that if the order of QAM is adjusted to maximize the capacity of a given route, there may be a significant degradation in the transmission performance of existing traffic for a given dynamic network architecture. We further report that such degradations are correlated to the accumulated peak-to-average power ratio of the added traffic along a given path, and that managing this ratio through pre-distortion reduces the impact of adjusting the constellation size of neighboring channels. (C) 2011 Optical Society of Americ
WDM signal regeneration using a single all-optical device
Using the principle of quasi-continuous filtering in a non-linear fibre, we propose an optical device for the simultaneous regeneration of sevaral channels at 40 Gbit/s. Simulations predict an improvement of the signal quality for four channels by more than 6.8 dB
Nonlinearity compensation in multi-rate 28 Gbaud WDM systems employing optical and digital techniques under diverse link configurations
Digital back-propagation (DBP) has recently been proposed for the comprehensive compensation of channel nonlinearities in optical communication systems. While DBP is attractive for its flexibility and performance, it poses significant challenges in terms of computational complexity. Alternatively, phase conjugation or spectral inversion has previously been employed to mitigate nonlinear fibre impairments. Though spectral inversion is relatively straightforward to implement in optical or electrical domain, it requires precise positioning and symmetrised link power profile in order to avail the full benefit. In this paper, we directly compare ideal and low-precision single-channel DBP with single-channel spectral-inversion both with and without symmetry correction via dispersive chirping. We demonstrate that for all the dispersion maps studied, spectral inversion approaches the performance of ideal DBP with 40 steps per span and exceeds the performance of electronic dispersion compensation by ~3.5 dB in Q-factor, enabling up to 96% reduction in complexity in terms of required DBP stages, relative to low precision one step per span based DBP. For maps where quasi-phase matching is a significant issue, spectral inversion significantly outperforms ideal DBP by ~3 dB
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