Optical Bit Error Rate

Chapter 8 - BER Statistical Measurements

8.1   INTRODUCTION

At the receiver, the quality of the arriving signal is continuously monitored and per-
formance metrics are periodically reported to network management. Performance
monitoring has always been critical in digital communications, even if the bit rate
or line rate was very low (1.5 Mbit/s). In optical communications, the bit rate has
been increased more than three orders of magnitude up to 40 Gbit/s. Accordingly,
the performance metrics have been changed to reflect the increase in bit rate. For
example, from an initial 10–5 BER to 10–12 for modern optical networks, and it is
better than 10–9 for telephony, better than 10–6 for data, and better than 10–4 for
telemetry and other low-rate data.

With the advent of DWDM technology that supports an aggregate data rate in
excess of terabits per second, performance monitoring becomes more important if
one also considers degradations due to photon–photon interactions, as discussed in
previous chapters.

Performance monitoring at current bit rates is not as easy as it used to be. Instru-
mentation is complex, has a large form factor, and is costly. As a result, it is not easily
incorporated into every input unit of a communications system. Thus, performance
monitoring relies on indirect means such as measuring BER from simple
codes such as parity, to very sophisticated error detecting and correcting codes such
as cyclic redundancy codes (CRC) and forward error correction (FEC). These codes
have been added to each information frame to detect and correct and count errors
and keep track of error seconds and other metrics defined in standards such as
ANSI, IETF, ITU-T, and others. However, error detecting and correcting (EDC)
codes are not solidly reliable because their detectability and correctability is limited
(see Chapter 9). For example, a simple parity check can detect (and not correct) a
single error but it fails to recognize two errors. A FEC code designed to detect sixteen
and correct eight errors will not detect or correct more than these limits. More
significantly, the FEC method requires several frames (or packets) to estimate the
bit error rate and thus long monitoring periods that may compromise the overall
system and network responsiveness to remedial actions (Figure 8.1). For example,
if the bit rate of a channel is 10 Gb/s and the channel performance objective is 10–15
BER (meaning one error in 1015 bits), it may take more than 27 hours to measure.

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