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10 x 111 Gbit/s 50 GHz spaced, POLMUX-RZ-DQPSK transmission over 2375 km employing coherent equalisation

TLDR
In this paper, the authors demonstrate spectrally efficient (2.0 b/s/Hz) transmission of 10 x 111 Gbit/s polarisation multiplexed 27.75 Gbaud RZ-DQPSK over 2375km of SSMF and 5 add-drop nodes.
Abstract
We demonstrate spectrally efficient (2.0 b/s/Hz) transmission of 10 x 111 Gbit/s polarisation multiplexed 27.75 Gbaud RZ-DQPSK over 2375km of SSMF and 5 add-drop nodes. Coherent equalisation enables polarisation recovery and high chromatic dispersion tolerance.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Digital filters for coherent optical receivers.

TL;DR: Using the analytical solution an upper bound on the number of taps required to compensate chromatic dispersion is obtained, with simulation revealing an improved bound of 2.2 taps per 1000ps/nm for 10.7GBaud data.
Journal ArticleDOI

Advanced Optical Modulation Formats

TL;DR: This paper discusses the generation and detection of multigigabit/s intensity- and phase-modulated formats, and highlights their resilience to key impairments found in optical networking, such as optical amplifier noise, multipath interference, chromatic dispersion, polarization-mode dispersion.
Journal ArticleDOI

Real-time measurements of a 40 Gb/s coherent system

TL;DR: Continuous real-time measurements are shown from a coherent 40 Gb/s transmission system that uses Dual-Polarization Quadrature Phase Shift Keying (DP-QPSK) modulation, using digital compensation for dispersion and polarization effects.
Journal ArticleDOI

Coherent Optical 25.8-Gb/s OFDM Transmission Over 4160-km SSMF

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors discuss coherent optical orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (CO-OFDM) as a suitable modulation technique for long-haul transmission systems and especially focus on phase noise compensation.
Journal ArticleDOI

121.9-Gb/s PDM-OFDM Transmission With 2-b/s/Hz Spectral Efficiency Over 1000 km of SSMF

TL;DR: In this paper, optical multi-band orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (OFDM) was used to reduce the required bandwidth of the digital-to-analogue/ analogue-to digital converters and the required cyclic prefix.
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