It is known that power is transferred from higher to lower frequencies (from lower to higher wavelengths) and thus between data transmission channels in optical fibers by stimulated Raman scattering (SRS). Thus, the original frequency spectrum of the light signal is “tilted”. This reduces the received power of the channels with short wavelengths; thus, increasing their bit error rate. It is also known to measure the tilting of the spectrum of light signals that are guided through optical fibers, particularly of optical data transmission paths, and to counteract this tilting by appropriate filtering or amplification.
In order to determine this tilting, use is made in the prior art of a complicated spectrally resolving measuring technique that cannot be widely applied because of the expensive and bulky measurement technology.
Furthermore, there is known from U.S. Pat. No. 5,818,629 a method and an arrangement for determining a mean wavelength (“momental wavelength”) of the transmitted light signals, and a control, dependent thereon, of an optical amplifier for compensating for the tilting of the spectrum of the transmitted light signals, in the case of which the “momental wavelength” of the injected light signals is determined in a “monitoring device” (see
It is, therefore, an object of the present invention to develop a method that can determine the tilting of the spectrum in an optical fiber in a simple and quick way without a spectrally resolving measuring technique.
In consideration of the above, the inventors have made the following findings:
As a consequence of the stimulated Raman scattering (SRS), power is transferred from channels with shorter wavelengths to channels with longer wavelengths. Some of the channels thus experience an additional attenuation, while the others experience through this nonlinear effect an amplification counteracting the fiber attenuation. This amplification or additional attenuation is a function of time. However, this aspect can be neglected in the case of strongly differing group delays between the interacting channels, which is frequently the case when use is made of SSMF (Standard Single Mode Fiber). Nevertheless, the result is precisely different mean powers for the individual channels as from the wavelength dependence of the gain in EDFA (Erbium Doped Fiber Amplifiers). This effect is termed “tilting” of the spectrum. It is possible, in principle, for the gain of an EDFA to be set specifically such that this effect is countered. However, compensating for any tilting in a data transmission path requires a simple method to be found for determining the tilting.
It is also possible, in principle, to determine a linear tilting, that is to say a first-order tilting, via the information from two total intensities in the spectrum respectively after the passage through at least one filter with a known frequency-dependent transmission characteristic, or at least one amplifier with a known frequency-dependent influencing characteristic, designated in general as influencing element below. Tiltings of higher order, that is to say nonlinear tiltings, can be approximated correspondingly by an appropriately high number of measurements of total intensities after the passage through other known frequency-dependent influencing elements in each case.
In order to determine the spectral tilting of a signal, it is sufficient, in principle, to extract light at a site and to determine the total intensity after the passage of two influencing elements; for example, filters or frequency-dependent amplifiers. One of these filters also can be reduced to an all-pass filter without phase response, such that it can just as well be removed. One influencing element and two measuring sites then suffice here for the total intensity, in order to determine the spectral tilting of the signal. However, if the total intensity of a signal is already known from other information before the passage through an influencing element, a single influencing element and a single measuring site of the total intensity downstream of this influencing element also suffice.
Signal tiltings in a signal path and tilting caused by the EDFA are fundamentally similar if a flat input spectrum is presupposed. However, in a transmission system, the spectrum at the transmitter end is deliberately predistorted such that the signal tilting downstream and upstream of the EDFA must be determined in order to determine the tilting by the EDFA, since otherwise the information about the input signal is not to hand.
In accordance with these inventive ideas outlined above, the inventors propose to improve the known method for determining the tilting of the spectrum of light signals in an optical fiber of an optical data transmission path by virtue of the fact that the optical data transmission path has the tilting of the spectrum, and the light signals are amplified by at least one optical amplifier, and a portion of the amplified light signals is extracted. The extracted light signals are partially guided through an influencing element with a known frequency-dependent intensity influence. Furthermore, the total intensity of the extracted light signals is measured upstream and downstream of the influencing element, and the total intensity of the light signals is measured before the amplification. Use is made in this case as influencing element (11) of an amplifier or a waveguide structure or fiber with an amplifying action. There is determined on the basis of the known influence of the influencing element (11) and the measured total intensities a control criterion for setting the tilting via which the tilting capability is controlled.
In a particular embodiment of the method, it is provided that use is made, as influencing element, of a settable optical filter and/or a frequency-dependent amplifier, it preferably being possible for this to be an EDFA (Erbium-doped Fiber Amplifier). It is also possible to make use as amplifier of other waveguide structures doped with rare earths. A Mach-Zehnder with adjustable time delay in one branch or settable intensity division onto the two branches is an example for a settable optical filter.
In accordance with the teachings of the present invention, the measuring method represented above also can be used for a method for setting or compensating for the tilting of the spectrum of light signals in an optical fiber of an optical data transmission path. This tilting can be varied or compensated for by virtue of the fact that one or more settable filters or attenuators and/or the frequency dependence of the amplification of one or more optical amplifiers, such as EDFA or other waveguide structures doped with rare earths, are set in such a way that they counteract the tilting produced on the transmission path.
It can be provided here according to the present invention that the part for varying the spectrum is a frequency dependent optical amplifier, preferably a waveguide structure doped with rare earths, a fiber or an EDFA, it being possible for the frequency dependence of the amplification of the waveguide structure or fiber to be set by varying the pump power in such a way that is opposes the original tilting.
Additional features and advantages of the present invention are described in, and will be apparent from, the following Detailed Description of the Invention and the Figures.
a shows a two-stage amplifier with reduction of the SRS influence by tilting of the gain.
b shows a transmission characteristic of a filter used.
a shows an increase of the mean gain as a function of the tilting.
b shows errors as a function of the tilting.
a shows how the SRS influence can be reduced by tilting the gain of an EDFA, the transmission characteristic of the filter used being illustrated in
Since optical data transmission paths can be of very different design, and the spectral power distribution can change during operation, only a variable, or settable, “gain tilting” makes sense. It is assumed in the following considerations that the mean population inversion of an EDFA in the initial state is selected such that minimal differences in gain, without the use of a filter, occur that are further largely completely eliminated with the aid of a filter.
In order to counteract the effect of the SRS, channels must experience a greater amplification for shorter wavelengths than for longer wavelengths. Precisely this effect occurs when the mean population inversion of the EDFA is increased, which is illustrated in
As
The increase in the mean gain is illustrated in
L standing for the total length of the doped fiber, σe(λ) and σa(λ) representing the coefficients, dependent on the wavelength λ, for emission and absorption, respectively, and
It is assumed below that the differences in gain are completely compensated for in the initial state with the aid of a filter. If the mean population inversion is now increased by the value Δ
By comparison with the initial state, an increase in gain by
is thus to be recorded. The gain tilting effected by an increase in the mean population inversion can, therefore, be described by a function ƒ(λ) that is fixed by the active cross section and is still to be multiplied by a factor. The last equation above makes it plain that the compensation of the SRS cannot be improved when the starting point is another initial state of the EDFA.
In order to be able to use this method in a commercial transmission system, it is necessary to have available a suitable rule that can be implemented easily.
As already set forth, a unique relationship exists between the increase in the internal gain and the tilting. The internal gain can be determined from the gain measured between input and output, by further adding the attenuation of an inserted attenuator. A controlled variable for the tilting is indirectly obtained thereby.
A grave difficulty results, nevertheless. Since no measuring device is generally available for spectrally resolved measurement, only the total power is known at the input and output of the amplifier, but not how this is distributed over the individual channels. It is thus impossible to determine a mean gain as unique reference variable. A simple solution to this problem comes from the extended EDFA design shown in
In order to reduce the influence of nonlinear fiber effects, various methods can be applied for occupying the available wavelength range depending on the type of fiber used. The above-described design of the present invention leads to restrictions, since the wavelength channel used to measure the gain must always be in operation.
A possible solution that circumvents this restriction can be set forth, as illustrated in
Thus, in this design it is not the task of the illustrated filter 11 to select an individual channel, but to simulate in its attenuation response the wavelength dependence of the gain tilting, that is to say the function f(λ) except for a constant of proportionality. Its transmission characteristic is
T(λ)=exp{−α·f(λ)},
in which the constant α may be known. If the powers of the N channels are designated by Pi and their wavelengths by λi, the powers measured at the input are
and, after filtering,
It holds correspondingly for the powers measured at the output of the amplifier that
and, after filtering,
The constant χ determines the degree of gain tilting and is to be determined below. The first step for this purpose is to expand the exponential function in a series and truncate it after the second-order term. This results in the system of equations
consisting of three equations in which the three unknowns
are obtained. The gain Gopt in the initial state is known from the design and dimensioning of the EDFA. It is, therefore, possible to determine the target variable χ uniquely:
The series expansion was terminated after the second-order term in order to keep the outlay low. As such, the exponential function can be approximated only within a bounded value range. If this value range is to be enlarged, terms of higher order likewise can be taken into account, there being a need to use further photodiodes with different upstream filters.
The Taylor series expansion yields a very good approximation of the exponential function for very small arguments, while greater deviations occur in the case of greater values. Consequently, the suggestion is to adapt the factor ½ in front of the second term such that the maximum error occurring becomes minimal within the desired value range. If the factor ½ is replaced, for example, by 0.81, gain tiltings of up to 4.5 dB can be set in conjunction with a maximum error of 0.18 dB.
In accordance with a further reaching aspect of the present invention, which leads to a particularly simple and elegant device for determining the tilting of the frequency spectrum, the following may be represented still employing special application of the above-described principle:
When considering the tilting in the case of a measured spectrum S(λ) in the wavelength region of λstart to λstop, it is possible to determine it by a numerical analysis, and to characterize a characteristic quantity for the tilting; for example, the first moment M1 of the spectrum relative to the middle wavelength λc of the spectrum (λc=(λstart+λstop)/2):
It is also possible to use other odd functions ƒ(x) (here, odd refers to ƒ(x)=−ƒ(−x)):
According to the present invention, instead of a complicated spectrally resolved measurement of the spectrum S(λ) and a subsequent numerical determination, by spectral analysis, of the tilting, the spectrum is weighted with the frequency response G(λ) with the aid of an optical filter, and the aggregate output power Pv of the filter is measured with the aid of a simple photodiode. The weighting can be adapted in this case to the expected tilting:
Since the frequency response G(λ) and the spectrum S(λ) are greater than 0, Pv is also greater than 0 even in the case of an untilted spectrum. This offset is to be born in mind during use. Furthermore, the frequency response G(λ) from: λstart to λstop should be odd in relation to G(λc) (here, odd refers to G(λc+x)−G(λc)=−[G(λc−x)−G(λc)]). Moreover, the monotonic edge of the filter frequency response should extend from λstart to λstop. Again, frequency responses of photodiodes or couplers can be taken into account in G(λ), if they would otherwise lead to falsifications of the measurement result. A bandpass restriction to a wavelength region to be considered (for example, from λstart to λstop) likewise can be included in G(λ).
A number of linearly tilted spectra S(λ)=a·λ+b, illustrated as dashed lines, are shown as a functional example in
of all the spectra is the same here, and so the same power would be measured via a photodiode independently of the tilting. If a filter with frequency response G(λ) is now inserted, the power measured at the photodiode becomes dependent on the tilting, as illustrated in
For example, a Mach-Zehnder interferometer with a cos2-type frequency response can be used as suitable filter. In this case, the measured value has an offset dependent on the aggregate power of the optical signal. Offset refers to the measuring device supplying a signal even given a vanishing tilting of the spectrum. This disadvantage can be avoided via an optical filter with two opposing frequency responses GAB(λ) and GAC(λ) and if it holds that GAB(λ)+GAC(λ)=const. An example of implementation with two opposing frequency responses is the use of the two outputs of a Mach-Zehnder interferometer. The tilting and the total power of the signal can be determined simultaneously with the aid of this design:
The tilting V is yielded from the difference between the measured values by:
The offset of V vanishes in the case of GAB(λc)=GAC(λc) for a linear frequency response.
The aggregate power P is calculated from the sum of the measured values:
This variable is advantageously used as early as when controlling the pump laser diodes in fiber amplifiers, and now also can be used for normalizing the tilting if the magnitude of the tilting, and not only the sign, is required.
The very simple and therefore cost-effective design of this measurement proves to be particularly advantageous in this solution illustrated, there being no need for spectrally resolved measurement. A decentral control becomes possible, as a result of which the outlay on control software is reduced and the control rate is increased. Furthermore, the weighting can be adapted to a fundamentally known tilting function of the fiber amplifier, and to possible disturbances in the spectrum such as, for example, tilting owing to SRS attenuation.
Thus, as a whole, the present invention exhibits a simple method for determining the tilting of the spectrum of an optical signal by measuring at least one total intensity subsequent to a passage of the signal through an influencing characteristic, including the possibility of using it to set the spectral tilting.
It goes without saying that the abovenamed features of the present invention can be used not only in the combination respectively specified, but also in other combinations or on their own, without departing from the scope of the invention.
Indeed, although the present invention has been described with reference to specific embodiments, those of skill in the art will recognize that changes may be made thereto without departing from the spirit and scope of the present invention as set forth in the hereafter appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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100 40 791 | Aug 2000 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/DE01/03073 | 8/10/2001 | WO | 00 | 9/29/2003 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO02/17514 | 2/28/2002 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
5818629 | Kinoshita | Oct 1998 | A |
5969840 | Roberts | Oct 1999 | A |
6049413 | Taylor et al. | Apr 2000 | A |
6175671 | Roberts | Jan 2001 | B1 |
6411417 | Roberts et al. | Jun 2002 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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0 933 894 | Aug 1999 | EP |
2 774 482 | Aug 1999 | FR |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20040120639 A1 | Jun 2004 | US |