Optical Bit Error Rate

Chapter 2.13 - Dispersion

2.13   DISPERSION

Dispersion is the effect of widening the temporal and spectral content of a signal. In
optical communications where pulses are subnanosecond, dispersion becomes very
critical to the signal quality and the signal performance at the receiver. In digital
transmission, a rule of thumb for acceptable dispersion (of any type) is

 Δτ < T/k

and the bit-rate information limit is expressed by

 Rb < 1/(kΔτ)

where Δτ = τ2τ1, Rb is the information (bit) rate, T is the bit period, k is the dispersion
factor (a transmission design parameter, typically selected to k = 4). If k = 5,
then less dispersion is acceptable, and if k = 3, more is.

There are several mechanisms that cause signal dispersion. Dispersion is caused
by signal imperfections and by the geometry and nonlinearity of the transmission
medium. For example, the signal is not monochromatic but polychromatic, and the
medium has geometrical and refractive-index variations. In addition, the latter exhibits
nonlinear behavior and interacts with photons.

 

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