DocumentCode
1257136
Title
A broadband wireless access network based on mesh-connected free-space optical links
Author
Acampora, Anthony S. ; Krishnamurthy, Srikanth V.
Author_Institution
California Univ., San Diego, La Jolla, CA, USA
Volume
6
Issue
5
fYear
1999
fDate
10/1/1999 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
62
Lastpage
65
Abstract
Driven by the twin forces of industry-wide deregulation and the explosive demand for Internet access and bandwidth-intensive multimedia services, broadband local access has emerged as one of the key issues in modern telecommunications. We describe a broadband local access network consisting of small, densely spaced packet-switching nodes interconnected by focused free-space optical links in a multihop mesh arrangement. Each switch serves a client, which may be an office building (containing, for example, conventional PBXs and LANs), a picocellular base station, or both. It is the responsibility of our local access network to economically and reliably extend broadband local access service (perhaps OC-3 or OC-12 for building LANs and PBXs; perhaps several tens of megabits per second to base stations) from an infrastructure end office or fiber ring add/drop multiplexer without requiring the installation of new buried optical cabling. Computed is the capacity of the multihop mesh, defined to be the maximum number of virtual connections which can be delivered to the infrastructure access point such that, independent of the traffic distribution among clients, all quality of service guarantees are maintained
Keywords
broadband networks; local area networks; multimedia communication; network topology; optical communication; optical links; packet switching; picocellular radio; private telephone exchanges; quality of service; subscriber loops; Internet access; LAN; OC-12; OC-3; PBX; bandwidth-intensive multimedia services; broadband wireless access network; densely spaced packet-switching nodes; fiber ring add/drop multiplexer; focused free-space optical links; industry-wide deregulation; infrastructure end office; mesh-connected free-space optical links; multihop mesh arrangement; multihop mesh capacity; office building; picocellular base station; quality of service guarantees; traffic distribution; virtual connections; Communication industry; Explosives; LAN interconnection; Optical fiber cables; Optical fiber communication; Optical fiber networks; Optical switches; Spread spectrum communication; Web and internet services; Wireless networks;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Personal Communications, IEEE
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1070-9916
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/98.799621
Filename
799621
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