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A comparative study of dpsk and ook wdm transmission over transoceanic distances and their performance degradations due to nonlinear phase noise
133
Citations
31
References
2003
Year
Wireless CommunicationsEngineeringOok Wdm TransmissionOptical Transmission SystemOptical Wireless CommunicationTransmission SystemOptical PropertiesModulation TechniqueOptical CommunicationOptical NetworkingPhotonicsElectrical EngineeringRadio Over FiberComparative StudySignal ProcessingTransmission PerformanceQ DegradationNonlinear Phase NoiseOptoelectronics
We have compared experimentally the transmission performance of return-to-zero differential phase-shift keying (RZ-DPSK) with RZ-ON-OFF keying (OOK), nonreturn-to-zero differential phase-shift keying (NRZ-DPSK), and NRZ-OOK for 100×10-Gb/s transmission with a spectral efficiency of 0.22 b/s/Hz over transoceanic distances. The Q degradation of the RZ-DPSK after transmission over 9180 km was 3 dB greater than that of RZ-OOK. The experimental results clearly showed the major cause of degradation for DPSK is not cross-phase modulation but self-phase modulation. The calculated nonlinear phase noise, i.e., the Gordon-Mollenauer effect, agreed with the experimental results. A distributed-Raman-amplifier assisted erbium-doped-fiber-amplified transmission line acted well in reducing the nonlinear phase noise.
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