====== Fiber Optics ====== ==== General information ==== **The speed of light in free space is $c = 3.10⁸ (m/s)$** Fiber optics propagate light using the **[[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Refraction|refractive index]]** of different materials. It is the ratio of the speed of light in free space to the speed of light in a given material. In fiber-optics, spectrum notation is generally stated in wavelength ($nm$) over frequency ($Hz$) because it is easier to use. $\lambda=\frac{c}{f}$ and $f=\frac{c}{\lambda}$ where $\lambda$ is wavelength ($nm$) and $f$ is frequency ($Hz$) and $c$ is the speed of light (approx. 2.10⁸ m/s) **As wavelength increases, frequency decreases.** When discussing Dense Wavelength Division Multiplexing (DWDM), frequency is preferred, in $THz$ ==== Electromagnetic spectrum ==== {{network:light_spectrum-cropped.png?1500}} **Infra**-red and **Ultra**-violet are prefixed using **frequency** in mind : *infrared has a lower frequency than the red in the visible spectrum (thus a higher wavelength) * ultraviolets have a higher frequency than the edge of our visible spectrum (thus a lower wavelength) ==== Advantages over copper connections ==== ***Extremely wide system bandwith :** With LEDs (5 ns response time) the bandwith is limited to about 100 MHz but with a laser light source data rates of 10 Gbps are possible on a single-mode fiber. By multiplexing, one can reach hundreds of Gbps. ***Immune to electrostatic interference :** External electrical noise does not affect the data transmission in fiber optics. However, other metallic points (connections, components, etc.) may be affected. ***No crosstalk :** Contrary to copper cable, light in fiber optics do not interfere from one fiber to another even if they are very close to each other. ***Low signal attenuation :** Typical attenuation is about 0.03 dB per 100 feet. ***Cost competitive :** With massive deployment costs are dropping. ***No electricity involved** ***No corrosion** ***Harder to intercept/tap** Requires efficient optical connectors due to excessive loss that can occur at connection points. ==== To Do on this page ==== Insert electromagnetic chart. Link to wikipedia page on light spectrum.