Book Chapter10.1007/978-0-387-28677-8_6
Optical networks, last mile access and applications
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TL;DR: Important design criteria for connecting the user to the “backbone” by FSO techniques will be covered, e.g., line of sight, network topology, reliability and availability.
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Abstract: Free Space Optical (FSO) links can be used to setup FSO communication networks or to supplement radio and optical fiber networks. Hence, it is the broadband wireless solution for closing the “last mile” connectivity gap throughout metropolitan networks. Optical wireless fits well into dense urban areas and is ideally suited for urban applications. This paper gives an overview of free-space laser communications. Different network architectures will be described and investigated regarding reliability. The usage of “Optical Repeaters”, Point-to-Point and Point-to-Multipoint solutions will be explained for setting up different network architectures. After having explained the different networking topologies and technologies, FSO applications will be discussed in section 2, including terrestrial applications for short and long ranges, and space applications. Terrestrial applications for short ranges cover the links between buildings on campus or different buildings of a company, which can be established with low-cost technology. For using FSO for long-range applications, more sophisticated systems have to be used. Hence, different techniques regarding emitted optical power, beam divergence, number of beams and tracking will be examined. Space applications have to be divided into FSO links through the troposphere, for example up- and downlinks between the Earth and satellites, and FSO links above the troposphere (e.g., optical inter-satellite links). The difference is that links through the troposphere are mainly influenced by weather conditions similar but not equal to terrestrial FSO links. Satellite orbits are above the atmosphere and therefore, optical inter-satellite links are not influenced by weather conditions. In section 3 the use of optical wireless for the last mile will be investigated and described in more detail. Therefore important design criteria for connecting the user to the “backbone” by FSO techniques will be covered, e.g., line of sight, network topology, reliability and availability. The advantages and disadvantages of different FSO technologies, as well as the backbone technology are discussed in this respect. Furthermore, the last mile access using FSO will be investigated for different environment areas (e.g., urban, rural, mountain) and climate zones. The availability of the FSO link is mainly determined by the local atmospheric conditions and distance and will be examined for the last mile. Results of various studies will complete these investigations. Finally, an example for realizing a FSO network for the last mile will be shown. In this example FSO transmitters with light emitting diodes (LED) instead of laser diodes will be described. By using LEDs, problems with laser-and eye safety are minimized. Some multimedia applications (like video-conferences, live TV-transmissions, etc.) will illustrate the range of applications for FSO last mile networks.
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Citations
M-ary phase-shift keying-based single-input-multiple-output free space optical communication system with pointing errors over a gamma-gamma fading channel.
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TL;DR: The outage probability and spectral efficiency of the proposed SIMO-FSO system with MRC technique improved significantly, and the effect of turbulence and pointing errors on BER is indicated.
15
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14
Topology and routing optimization for congestion minimization in optical wireless networks
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11
Power distribution and BER in indoor VLC with PPM based modulation schemes: a comparative study
TL;DR: In this article, a comparison is introduced between DIPPM, SC-L-PPM, and M-ary variable pulse position modulation according to error performance and bit rate, and a simulation is carried out to measure the optical power distribution for a LED lamp in an indoor room topology for each modulation technique.
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Free-space optics: broadband wireless supplement to fiber networks
TL;DR: In this article, the results of the investigations of the research group "OptiKon" on different installed common network-architectures (ring, mesh and star) are presented.
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Impact of atmospheric effects in free-space optics transmission systems
TL;DR: In this article, the authors have done reliability and availability tests on commercial available and also on self-developed optical point-to-point and pointto-multipoint systems and sent test data at 155 Mbps (STM-1) from one FSO-unit to a distant (27 km) FSO unit.
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