Heath,

> I just had a thought about EFDA - please forgive my lack of
> terminology though, i'll try to explain:
> Say you have signal coming in to EFDA, the signal is just amplified
> (as you said, also noise - the whole source signal).
> Would it be possible to extract via PLL or similar the source clock
> and use that to modulate the amplifier power?
> Does it work with QPSK / whatever keying is used?
> Would that even help with the noise issue at all, or am I waaaaay off?

Although you can amplify just a single wavelength with an EDFA (has to be in 
the 1550nm range, not 1310nm), most deployments are using EDFAs in a DWDM 
environment.  The C-band alone consists of ~5THz (5000GHz) of spectrum between 
191.00-195.95 Thz.  Some systems pack 40 wavelengths into this space at 100GHz 
spacing, some 80 channels @ 50GHz spacing, others 160 @ 25GHz.  Each of these 
signals is independent, they can each be using different 
modulation/bitrate/etc.  The amplifiers are completely ignorant to what is 
going on with each channel, only the devices performing conversion back to the 
electrical domain need to care about these details (after the incoming light 
has been demultiplexed into individual signals, of course).

Re: amplifier power...  Amplifier gain should really stay constant unless new 
wavelengths are added/removed from the fiber.  There are fixed-gain and 
variable-gain amps.  VGAs have the advantage that engineers do not need to 
manually re-balance power levels whenever a large number of wavelengths are 
added or removed from a span, they adjust automatically.  Newer DWDM systems 
should all have VGAs whereas a lot of earlier generation DWDM systems still use 
fixed-gain amps.  With the older fixed-gain amps, you had to have the input 
power just right -- hence the need to re-balance if your aggregate signal 
changes a lot -- too low and the EDFA would not kick on at all, too high and 
you'd saturate the amp.

-Chris

--
Chris Tracy <ctr...@es.net>
Energy Sciences Network (ESnet)
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory





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