DocumentCode
2474523
Title
A probabilistic model for optical fiber channels with zero dispersion
Author
Yousefi, Mansoor I. ; Kschischang, Frank R.
Author_Institution
Edward S. Rogers Sr. Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Univ. of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada
fYear
2010
fDate
12-14 May 2010
Firstpage
221
Lastpage
225
Abstract
Signal evolution in optical fibers with zero dispersion and distributed Raman amplification is modeled by a stochastic nonlinear ordinary differential equation (ODE) which includes the effects of the Kerr nonlinearity and amplified spontaneous emission noise. Such a mathematical model in the form of a stochastic nonlinear ODE is not initially suitable for information-theoretic analysis. In this paper we provide a simple framework to probabilistically model signal propagation in optical fibers. The analysis is based on discretizing the fiber as a cascade of an infinite number of infinitesimal pieces of fiber in the distance dimension, while at the same time quantizing the signal into a large number of small bins in the complex plane. This can be understood in the context of the sum-product algorithm, known in coding theory. Though the method can be also applied to fibers with dispersion, in this paper it is illustrated for the special case of zero dispersion. In particular, for this case we find the conditional probability density function of the output signal given the input signal. We further show that the capacity of the dispersion-free optical channel as a function of signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) goes to infinity with SNR → ∞.
Keywords
amplification; differential equations; information theory; optical fibre communication; probability; signal processing; Kerr nonlinearity; distributed Raman amplification; information-theoretic analysis; optical fiber channels; ordinary differential equation; probabilistic model; signal evolution; signal propagation; signal-to-noise ratio; stochastic nonlinear ODE; sum-product algorithm; zero dispersion; Differential equations; Information analysis; Mathematical model; Optical fiber dispersion; Optical fiber theory; Optical fibers; Optical noise; Spontaneous emission; Stimulated emission; Stochastic resonance; Information theory; Kerr nonlinearity; optical fiber; stochastic processes;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Communications (QBSC), 2010 25th Biennial Symposium on
Conference_Location
Kingston, ON
Print_ISBN
978-1-4244-5709-0
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/BSC.2010.5472921
Filename
5472921
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