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Fiber Optic Transmission
SL/HL – Option C.3
Reflection/Refraction
• Reflection– A wave encounters a boundary between two
mediums and cannot pass through– The angle of incidence is always equal to the
angle of reflection
• Refraction– When a wave passes through boundary into a
new medium its speed changes– The wave will change directions based on the
change in its speed
Refraction
• If the wave speeds up it will bend away from the normal line
• If the wave slows down it will bend towards the normal line
• Snell’s Lawsin sini i r rn n
Critical Angle
• When traveling into air from some medium, light will always speed up, thus increasing the angle– If it speeds up enough, the angle of refraction will
be 90 degrees• This means that the refracted ray will travel along the
edge of the boundary
Critical Angle
• When light strikes the boundary at the critical angle or greater, the wave is totally reflected back into the first medium
• Here n1 is the index of refraction of the medium the light starts in
Total Internal Reflection
• Usually when a wave reaches a boundary between mediums it is partially reflected and partially refracted– When the critical angle is
exceeded the entire wave is reflected back within the medium
– The wave doesn’t lose any energy
Optical Fiber
• Fiber optic cable is made of thin, clear glass or plastic
• Once light enters the cable it is totally internally reflected until it reaches the far end– Actual optical fiber is step indexed• There is another layer between
the core and the outside• This is so the fibers can be
bundled together
Dispersion
• Modal– Not all the waves that enter make it to the other
end, only certain ones– The possible paths are called modes
• Material– Because different frequencies have different
refractive indices, they have different paths• These can both cause problems if the bits of
data arrive out of order • More direct modes are faster• Laser light and single mode cable reduce
these effects
Material Dispersion
Attenuation
• Attenuation is the opposite of amplification– As a signal travels through a cable it will slowly
lose intensity as energy is lost– Attenuation is measured in decibels (dB)
• The 10 at the beginning is to convert to decibels• Generally measured in dBkm-1
10 10
10 log ( ) 10log ( )
i
o
PPower inattenuation
Power out P
Wavelength/Attenuation
Noise
• One advantage to using fiber optics is that it is not particularly susceptible to noise– Any noise that does occur is generally due to
random light entering the end of the cable– The power ratio of noise to signal in fiber optics is
generally in the range of 10-17 or 10-18
Reshapers
• Monomode fibers can eliminate modal dispersion and lasers cut down on material dispersion, but it is not completely eliminated– Over a long distance individual pulses can start to
overlap each other– Every 40-60km is a reshaper which will detect and
reshape the signal• Has its own laser which sends a ‘new’ signal
Amplifiers
• Even with reshaping, signals still attenuate over the length of the cable– Amplifiers along the cable increase the signal
strength to keep it going
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