Lightwave Technology

Chapter 5 - Signal Recovery and Noise

Chapter 5


Signal Recovery and Noise

An optical bit stream that has been degraded by the linear and nonlinear mechanisms during its transmission through the fiber link eventually reaches an optical receiver, which converts it into an electrical form and attempts to recover the original coded information. However, the distorted nature of the optical signal, and the noise added by optical amplifiers and the receiver, make it nearly impossible to recover the original bit stream with 100% accuracy. For this reason, the performance of a lightwave system is characterized in terms of the bit-error rate (BER). This chapter focuses on noise sources and their impact on BER and receiver sensitivity. Section 5.1 deals with shot and thermal noises that must be taken into account for any receiver. The signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) of the electrical signal generated at the receiver is considered in Section 5.2. The concept of receiver sensitivity is introduced in Section 5.3, where we obtain a simple expression for the BER and relate it to an important parameter known as the Q factor. Degradation of receiver sensitivity caused by a number of unavoidable processes is discussed in Section 5.4. The topic of forward error correction is addressed in Section 5.5.

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