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Optical Fiber Communications

Gerd Keiser
TLDR
The concept of WDM combined with optical amplifiers has resulted in communication links that allow rapid communications between users in countries all over the world as discussed by the authors, which is known as wavelength division multiplexing (WDM).
Abstract
Optical fibers are used extensively for data transmission systems because of their dielectric nature and their large information-carrying capacity. Network architectures using multiple wavelength channels per optical fiber are utilized in local, metropolitan, or wide-area applications to connect thousands of users having a wide range of transmission capacities and speeds. A powerful aspect of an optical communication link is that many different wavelengths can be sent along a fiber simultaneously in the 1300-to-1600- nm spectrum. The technology of combining a number of wavelengths onto the same fiber is known as wavelength division multiplexing (WDM). The concept of WDM used in conjunction with optical amplifiers has resulted in communication links that allow rapid communications between users in countries all over the world. Keywords: optical fibers; attenuation; photonic systems; WDM; optical amplifiers; dispersion; nonlinear effects

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Fiber-Optic Communication Systems

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present an overview of the main components of WDM lightwave communication systems, including the following: 1.1 Geometrical-Optics Description, 2.2 Wave Propagation, 3.3 Dispersion in Single-Mode Fibers, 4.4 Dispersion-Induced Limitations.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mode-Division Multiplexing Over 96 km of Few-Mode Fiber Using Coherent 6 $\,\times\,$ 6 MIMO Processing

TL;DR: In this article, simultaneous transmission of six spatial and polarization modes, each carrying 40 Gb/s quadrature-phase-shift-keyed channels over 96 km of a low-differential group delay few-mode fiber, is reported.
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Optical constants of silica glass from extreme ultraviolet to far infrared at near room temperature.

TL;DR: New formulas providing comprehensive approximations of the optical properties of silica glass are proposed between 7 and 50 microm, which are consistent with experimental data and substantially extend the spectral range of 0.21-7 microm covered by existing formulas and can be used in various engineering applications.
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A review of fiber-optic biosensors

TL;DR: Tapered fiber-optic biosensors (TFOBS) as mentioned in this paper are a type of FOBS which rely on special geometries to expose the evanescent field to interact with samples.
Journal ArticleDOI

Routing and Spectrum Allocation in Elastic Optical Networks: A Tutorial

TL;DR: A tutorial that covers the key aspects of elastic optical networks, and explores the experimental demonstrations that have tested the functionality of the elastic optical network, along with the research challenges and open issues posed by flexible networks.