Ultrahigh-Speed Optical Transmission Technology

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Hans-Georg Weber, Masataka Nakazawa
Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 18 dic 2010 - 482 páginas

Ultrahigh-speed optical transmission technology is a key technology for increasing the communication capacity. In optical fibre networks, the number of wavelength channels and the bit rate per wavelength channel, i.e. the TDM (Time Division Multiplexing) bit rate, determine the transmission capacity. Currently, TDM bit rates of more than 40 Gbit/s require optical signal processing (Optical Time Division Multiplexing, OTDM). OTDM bit rates of up to 1.2 Tbit/s have already been reported. The devices developed for ultrahigh-speed optical transmission are not limited to communication applications only. They are key devices for high-speed optical signal processing, i.e. monitoring, measurement and control, and will thus give a wide technological basis for innovative science and technology. All these aspects of ultrahigh-speed optical transmission technology are described in detail in this book.

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Sobre el autor (2010)

H.G.Weber: Professor of Physics at the Technical University of Berlin and head of a research group at the Fraunhofer Institute for Telecommunications, Heinrich-Hertz-Institute, in Berlin, Germany.

M. Nakazawa: Professor of Broadband Communication Engineering at the Research Institute of Electrical Communication of Tohoku University, Japan

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