Study of Fiber Nonlinearities and Effect of Phase, Input Power and Chirping Factor on Received Power
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Abstract
Optical fibers are not only used in telecommunication links but also used in
the Internet and local area networks (LAN) to achieve high signaling rates. In
this dissertation, fiber nonlinearities have been studied, and analyze the effect
of various parameters on the received power. Optical amplifiers like EDFAs
simply amplify the optical signal by several orders of magnitude without being
limited by electronic speed. Transmission impairments, which are general not
significant in a regenerative system, accumulate along the transmission link
when amplifiers are used, so that they can not be simply ignored, and this
puts a new challenge to transmission design engineers. The nonlinearities in
optical fibers fall into two categories. One is stimulated scattering (Raman
and Brillouin), and the other is the optical Kerr effect due to changes in the
refractive index with optical power. Phase modulation due to intensity
dependent refractive index induces various nonlinear effects, namely, selfphase
modulation (SPM), cross-phase modulation (CPM), and four-wave
mixing (FWM). For an understanding of nonlinear phenomena in optical fibers
it is necessary to understand the Nonlinear Schrödinger equation, which
describe the propagation of wave in nonlinear medium. It is required to solve
the nonlinear Schrödinger equation to understand various impairments
occurring during signal transmission. The split-step Fourier method is one
of the most popular algorithms because of its good accuracy and relatively
modest computing cost. Nonlinear equations are simulates in using split step
Fourier transform to study the effect of various parameters.
