Optical Bit Error Rate

Chapter 3 - Optical Transmitters and Receivers

3.1   INTRODUCTION

In optical transmission systems, there are three key elements: the transmitter (laser
and modulator), the photodetector, and the optical transmission medium (the fiber).
Typically, the detector is characterized by a level of sensitivity to impinging optical
power. That is, the optical signal must be greater than the sensitivity and within certain
limits. A too strong optical power oversaturates the detector (as the sun blinds
us when looking into it) and a too weak power will be detected with many errors.
The optical fiber is the information conduit but it is lossy, so the propagating optical
signal experiences power loss. Therefore, the transmitter must provide enough optical
power to the signal that enters the fiber to overcome loss and arrive at the photodetector
above its sensitivity threshold. Now, this discussion is very simplistic
when applied to the DWDM case as transmission becomes a complex matter. Laser
sources and modulators are not so ideally simple, the transmitted signal is not as
perfect, the transmission medium is complex, and the receiver is more complex. In
this chapter, we examine the transmitter and the receiver, their parameters and their
characteristics.

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