Lightwave Technology

Chapter 1 - Introduction

Chapter 1


Introduction

Lightwave systems represent a natural extension of microwave communication systems inasmuch as information is transmitted over an electromagnetic carrier in both types of systems. The major difference from a conceptual standpoint is that, whereas carrier frequency is typically ~1 GHz for microwave systems, it increases by five orders of magnitude and is typically ~100 THz in the case of lightwave systems. This increase in carrier frequency translates into a corresponding increase in the system capacity. Indeed, whereas microwave systems rarely operate above 0.2 Gb/s, commercial lightwave systems can operate at bit rates exceeding 1 Tb/s. Although the optical carrier is transmitted in free space for some applications related to satellites and space research, terrestrial lightwave systems often employ optical fibers for information transmission. Such fiber-optic communication systems have been deployed worldwide since 1980 and constitute the backbone behind the Internet. One can even claim that the lightwave technology together with advances in microelectronics was responsible for the advent of the "information age" by the end of the twentieth century. The objective of this book is to describe the physics and engineering behind various kinds of lightwave systems. The purpose of this introductory chapter is to present the basic concepts together with the background material. Section 1.1 provides a historical perspective on the development of lightwave communication systems. Section 1.2 focuses on the building blocks of such a system and describes briefly the three components known as optical transmitters, fibers, and receivers. Section 1.3 covers the concepts such as analog and digital signals and the technique used to convert between the two. Channel multiplexing in the time and frequency domains is described in Section 1.4 where we also discuss the technique of code-division multiplexing.

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