DocumentCode :
753474
Title :
Capacity of broadcast channels in the near-future CATV architecture
Author :
Foschini, G.J. ; Habbab, I.M.I.
Author_Institution :
Crawford Hill Lab., AT&T Bell Labs., Holmdel, NJ, USA
Volume :
13
Issue :
3
fYear :
1995
fDate :
3/1/1995 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage :
507
Lastpage :
516
Abstract :
Reports fundamental information theoretic results for near-future CATV downstream digital distribution networks. The CATV industry is evolving to this network architecture to quickly replace plant that would otherwise be left with serious reliability problems owing to deployment of cascades of electronic amplifiers. This new architecture is composed of a passive fiber trunk feeding COAX branches altogether serving about 200 homes. Frequency-division-multiplexed digital signals subcarrier intensity modulate a laser illuminating a single-mode fiber. Only one (electronic) amplifier is used and it is located at the COAX feed. Aside from additive white Gaussian noise (AWGN) from shot noise exacerbated by the amplifier, a significant impairment is the clipping stemming from the intensity modulation. A dimensionless parameter identified as key to describing channel capacity is I0/(qFB) where I0 (0.01 to 1 mA) is the photocurrent delivered, q is electron charge, F (10 log F=2 to 10 dB) is the electronic amplifier effective noise figure and B (200 MHz to 1 GHz) is the overall system bandwidth. The following are reported: the optimal design of the head end where signals are launched, availability of extraordinarily high capacities, and how a hefty fraction of capacity might be achieved
Keywords :
Gaussian channels; broadband networks; cable television; channel capacity; digital television; frequency division multiplexing; high definition television; optical fibre subscriber loops; optical modulation; subcarrier multiplexing; television broadcasting; television interference; 200 MHz to 1 GHz; COAX branches; additive white Gaussian noise; broadcast channels; channel capacity; clipping; downstream digital distribution networks; frequency-division-multiplexed digital signals; head end; information theoretic results; intensity modulation; near-future CATV architecture; network architecture; optimal design; passive fiber trunk; shot noise; subcarrier intensity modulate; AWGN; Additive white noise; Broadcasting; Channel capacity; Coaxial components; Electronics industry; Frequency; Industrial electronics; Intensity modulation; Telecommunication network reliability;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Lightwave Technology, Journal of
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0733-8724
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/50.372448
Filename :
372448
Link To Document :
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