Paper
11 February 2005 Economic benefits of digital electronic equalization in metro and regional core optical networks
Douglas J. S. Beckett, Dirk Barthel, Theo Kupfer, Saeid Aramideh
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Proceedings Volume 5625, Optical Transmission, Switching, and Subsystems II; (2005) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.577165
Event: Asia-Pacific Optical Communications, 2004, Beijing, China
Abstract
Digital electronic equalization is a key enabler for the cost-effective deployment of 10 Gb/s optical transmission in metro and regional core networks. The wider dispersion tolerance enabled by digital equalization eliminates the need for Dispersion Compensation Modules (DCMs) and amplifier gain-stages, with correspondingly simpler installation, lower capital cost, and reduced operating footprint and power costs. Digital equalization counters both propagation and component distortion, and so permits the relaxation of component specifications. The use of digital-equalization-enabled Adaptive Distortion Tolerant Transponders on 10G DWDM line cards results in significant system-wide cost savings.
© (2005) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Douglas J. S. Beckett, Dirk Barthel, Theo Kupfer, and Saeid Aramideh "Economic benefits of digital electronic equalization in metro and regional core optical networks", Proc. SPIE 5625, Optical Transmission, Switching, and Subsystems II, (11 February 2005); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.577165
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KEYWORDS
Distortion

Optical amplifiers

Transponders

Scanning probe microscopy

Tolerancing

Digital electronics

Dense wavelength division multiplexing

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