The present invention relates generally to undersea optical transmission systems, and more particularly to a cable station for an optical transmission system to which electrical power is supplied such as an undersea optical transmission system.
An undersea optical transmission system consists of land-based cable stations interconnected by a cable that is installed on the ocean floor. The cable contains optical fibers that carry Dense Wavelength Division Multiplexed (DWDM) optical signals between the terminals. The cable stations contain power supplies for the undersea cable, transmission equipment to insert and remove DWDM signals from the fibers and associated monitoring and control equipment. Over long distances the strength and quality of a transmitted optical signal diminishes. Accordingly, repeaters are located along the cable, which contain optical amplifiers to provide amplification to the optical signals to overcome fiber loss.
A functional block diagram of a conventional cable station is shown in
On the transmit side, the SLTE 12 receives traffic such as an STM signal from a terrestrial terminal that is generally located in a Point of Presence (PoP). The SLTE 12 converts each wavelength of the optical signal to an electrical signal and encodes it with FEC. An electrical to optical unit modulates a continuous wave light from a laser with the electrical signal to generate an optical line signal at each wavelength, which is then optically amplified. The amplified wavelengths may undergo signal conditioning such as dispersion compensation before (or after) being multiplexed together and sent out on the undersea transmission cable. The receive side of the SLTE 12 operates in a complementary manner. The SLTE 12 may also performing line monitoring to determine the status and health of the transmission path. For example, the SLTE 12 may employ a COTDR arrangement to monitor and measure the optical loss of the transmission line.
One type of highly specialized optical transmission network is undersea or submarine optical transmission systems in which a cable containing optical fibers is installed on the ocean floor. The design of cable stations, as well as the design of undersea optical transmission systems generally, are typically customized on a system-by-system basis and employ highly specialized terminals to transmit data over the undersea optical transmission path. Since the specialized terminals are produced in small volumes they are relatively expensive in comparison to optical transmission terminals designed for terrestrial optical networks, which are typically produced in relatively high volume for terrestrial optical transmission networks. Moreover, the amount of equipment that can be located in the cable station is limited because of the relatively small dimensions of most cable stations.
Accordingly, it would be desirable to provide a cable station for an undersea optical transmission system that is more economical while potentially reducing the amount of space it occupies.
In accordance with the present invention, a land-based cable station is provided for an undersea optical transmission system. The cable station includes submarine line terminal equipment (SLTE) for processing terrestrial traffic received from an external source, power feed equipment for supplying electrical power to active undersea components of the transmission system, an element management system for configuring and obtaining status information from the transmission system, and a cable termination box in which an undersea cable terminates. The SLTE includes terrestrial optical transmission equipment receiving the terrestrial traffic and generating optical signals in response thereto. The SLTE also includes an interface device providing signal conditioning to the optical signals received from the terrestrial optical transmission equipment so that the optical signals are suitable for transmission through the undersea optical transmission system.
In accordance with one aspect of the invention, the terrestrial optical equipment is a SONET/SDH terminal.
In accordance with another aspect of the invention, the terrestrial optical terminal is an ATM terminal.
In accordance with another aspect of the invention, the terrestrial optical terminal is a Gigabit Ethernet terminal.
In accordance with another aspect of the invention, the undersea optical transmission system is a WDM transmission system.
In accordance with another aspect of the invention, the interface device is configured to perform at least one signal conditioning process selected from the group consisting of gain equalization, bulk dispersion compensation, optical amplification, Raman amplification, dispersion slope compensation, PMD compensation, load balancing, and performance monitoring.
In accordance with another aspect of the invention, the external source from which the terrestrial traffic is received is a terrestrial point-of-presence.
In accordance with another aspect of the invention, the interface device includes line monitoring equipment.
In accordance with another aspect of the invention, the line monitoring equipment is a COTDR arrangement.
In accordance with another aspect of the invention, the interface device includes an arrangement for supplying pump power to impart Raman amplification to the optical signals.
The present inventors have recognized that much of the functionality of a conventional, highly specialized SLTE can be performed by conventional optical transmission equipment of the type that is generally employed in a terrestrial POP such as a central office, switching station, or other network access point. That is, the terrestrial optical transmission equipment performs any necessary optical-to-electrical conversion, FEC processing, electrical-to-optical conversion, and optical multiplexing. The terrestrial optical transmission equipment may also perform optical amplification, optical monitoring that is designed for the terrestrial optical network, and network protection. Examples of terrestrial optical equipment that are currently available and which may be used in connection with the present invention include, but are not limited to, the Nortel LH1600 and LH4000, Siemens MTS 2, Cisco 15808 and the Ciena CoreStream long-haul transport products. The terrestrial optical equipment may also be a network router in which Internet routing is accomplished as well the requisite optical functionality. Moreover, the terrestrial optical equipment that is employed may conform to a variety of different protocol standards, such SONET/SDH ATM and Gigabit Ethernet, for example.
The remaining functionality of the SLTE can be performed by an interface device that provides the signal conditioning necessary to transmit the traffic over an undersea optical transmission cable. One example of suitable interface device is disclosed in U.S. application Ser. No. 10/621,028, which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.
As discussed in the aforementioned reference, the optical interface device disclosed therein receives the optical signals from terrestrial optical transmission equipment such as a SONET/SDH transmission terminal either as individual wavelengths on separate fibers or as a WDM signal on a single fiber. The interface device provides the optical layer signal conditioning that is not provided by the SONET/SDH terminals, but which is necessary to transmit the optical signals over the undersea transmission path. The signal conditioning that is provided may include, but is not limited to, gain equalization, bulk dispersion compensation, optical amplification, multiplexing, Raman amplification, dispersion slope compensation, polarization mode dispersion (PMD) compensation, performance monitoring, signal load balancing (e.g., dummy channel insertion), or any combination thereof. The optical interface device may also include line monitoring equipment such as a COTDR arrangement, an autocorrelation arrangement, or other techniques that uses in-band or out-of band probe signals to determine the status and health of the transmission path. Additionally, the optical interface device may supply pump power to the transmission path so that Raman amplification can be imparted to the optical signals,
In one embodiment of the invention, the terrestrial equipment and the interface device are located in the cable station of the undersea optical transmission system.
The available floor space in a cable station is typically kept to a minimum because of its proximity to seashore. Accordingly, in some embodiments of the invention it may be advantageous to place the optical transmission terminal 102 in the POP, thereby reducing the amount of floor space that is required. In this case the transmission equipment 102 and the interface device 104 are remotely located with respect to one another. In yet another embodiment of the invention, the required amount of floor space in the cable station can be further reduced by placing both the transmission equipment 102 and the interface device 104 in the POP.
While
The optical performance monitors 502 and 518 ensure that appropriate signal quality is maintained. The optical performance monitors 502 and 518 may measure the OSNR, Q-factor, or BER of the optical signal. In operation, a tap or other device directs a small portion of the optical signal to an optical amplifier, filter, and a receiver for converting the optical signal to an electrical signal. A dual channel CDR with an adjustable decision threshold and phase is used to determine the error performance of the data signal. The optical performance information determined by the performance monitor 520 may be used as feedback to control the gain equalizer 504 or the PMD compensator 516.
Although various embodiments are specifically illustrated and described herein, it will be appreciated that modifications and variations of the present invention are covered by the above teachings and are within the purview of the appended claims without departing from the spirit and intended scope of the invention. For example, while the invention has been discussed in terms of an undersea optical transmission system, those of ordinary skill in art will recognize that the invention is equally applicable to a land-based optical transmission system in which the electrical power for the repeaters is supplied from the cable stations. Such a transmission system may be advantageously employed, for example, in a remote location where it would otherwise be difficult to power and access the repeaters.