Muxponder and method of converting a plurality of tributary optical communications signals having a first bit rate into an optical line signal having a second, higher bit rate
US-2016065325-A1 · Mar 3, 2016 · US
US9490931B2 · US · B2
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Publication number | US-9490931-B2 |
| Application number | US-201114358696-A |
| Country | US |
| Kind code | B2 |
| Filing date | Dec 22, 2011 |
| Priority date | Dec 22, 2011 |
| Publication date | Nov 8, 2016 |
| Grant date | Nov 8, 2016 |
A practical reading order for non-experts. Skip the full description unless you need deep technical detail.
What the patent document calls the invention.
A short plain-language summary of the technical disclosure.
Who owns or filed the patent and who is credited as inventor.
Filing, priority, publication, and grant dates set the timeline.
The legal scope of protection — read this for what is actually claimed.
Technology tags used to group this patent with similar filings.
Prior art links and similar publications in this corpus.
Official abstract text for this publication.
A muxponder comprising: modulation format conversion apparatus comprising: first and second inputs each arranged to receive an amplitude modulated tributary optical signal carrying a communications traffic bit stream; first and second optical to electrical signal conversion apparatus each arranged to receive a respective tributary optical signal and to convert it into a corresponding tributary electrical signal carrying the communications traffic bit stream; a delay element arranged to synchronize the communications traffic bit streams; and an optical IQ modulator arranged to receive an optical carrier signal and the tributary electrical signals. The optical IQ modulator having an in-phase arm and a quadrature arm, each arm being arranged to receive one of the tributary electrical signals such that each tributary electrical signal drives the respective arm of the optical IQ modulator to encode the communications traffic bit streams onto the optical carrier signal in a multilevel modulation format.
Opening claim text (preview).
The invention claimed is: 1. A muxponder comprising: a modulation format conversion apparatus comprising: first and second inputs each arranged to receive separately a respective binary amplitude modulated tributary optical signal carrying a respective communications traffic bit stream at a first bit rate; first and second optical to electrical signal conversion apparatus each arranged to convert a respective one of the tributary optical signals into a corresponding amplitude modulated tributary electrical signal carrying the respective communications traffic bit stream; at least one delay element arranged to synchronize the communications traffic bit streams; and an optical IQ (in-phase and quadrature) modulator arranged to receive an optical carrier signal and the tributary electrical signals, wherein the optical IQ modulator has an in-phase (I) arm and a quadrature (Q) arm, each arm being arranged to receive a respective one of the tributary electrical signals such that one of said tributary electrical signals drives the I arm of the optical IQ modulator and the other of the tributary electrical signals drives the Q arm of the optical IQ modulator to thereby encode the communications traffic bit streams onto the optical carrier signal in a multilevel modulation format having a second bit rate, that is an aggregate of the two communications traffic bit stream, and in which the second bit rate is higher than the first bit rate, wherein the at least one delay element is an optical delay line provided before the respective optical to electrical signal conversion apparatus. 2. The muxponder as claimed in claim 1 , wherein the modulation format conversion apparatus further comprises: third and fourth inputs, each arranged to receive separately a respective binary amplitude modulated tributary optical signal at the first bit rate; and first and second optical signal combining apparatus, the first optical signal combining apparatus being provided between the first and second inputs and the first optical to electrical signal conversion apparatus, and the second optical signal combining apparatus being provided between the third and fourth inputs and the second optical to electrical signal conversion apparatus, each optical signal combining apparatus being arranged to receive said tributary optical signal from each respective input and being arranged to combine the binary amplitude modulated tributary optical signals to form a respective tributary optical signal having a four-level modulation format. 3. The muxponder as claimed in claim 1 , wherein the muxponder further comprises first and second overhead insertion apparatus each provided between the respective optical to electrical signal conversion apparatus and the optical modulator, each overhead insertion apparatus being arranged to insert respective overhead bits into the communications traffic bit stream of the respective tributary electrical signal. 4. The muxponder as claimed in claim 1 , wherein the muxponder comprises a multiplexing stage comprising: first and second of said modulation format conversion apparatus, the optical IQ modulator of the first said apparatus being arranged to receive a first optical sub-carrier signal having a carrier wavelength and a first polarisation state, and the optical IQ modulator of the second said apparatus being arranged to receive a second optical sub-carrier signal having the carrier wavelength and a second polarisation state; and a polarisation beam combiner arranged to receive the first and second optical sub-carrier signals from the optical modulator and arranged to polarisation multiplex the first and second optical sub-carrier signals to form a dual polarisation optical carrier signal having the carrier wavelength and carrying the communications traffic bit streams encoded in the multilevel modulation format. 5. The muxponder as claimed in claim 4 , wherein the muxponder comprises: a plurality of said multiplexing stages, each arranged to form a dual polarisation optical carrier signal having a different carrier wavelength and carrying respective communications traffic bit streams encoded in the multilevel modulation format; and an optical multiplexer arranged to receive and wavelength multiplex said dual polarisation optical carrier signals. 6. The muxponder as claimed in claim 1 , wherein the amplitude modulated tributary optical signals are modulated in an on-off keying modulation format and the multilevel modulation format is one of quaternary phase-shift keying and 16-quadrature amplitude modulation. 7. A communications network node comprising: a muxponder comprising: a modulation format conversion apparatus comprising: first and second inputs each arranged to receive separately a respective binary amplitude modulated tributary optical signal carrying a respective communications traffic bit stream at a first bit rate; first and second optical to electrical signal conversion apparatus each arranged to convert a respective one of the tributary optical signals into a corresponding amplitude modulated tributary electrical signal carrying the respective communications traffic bit stream; at least one delay element arranged to synchronize the communications traffic bit streams; and an optical IQ (in-phase and quadrature) modulator arranged to receive an optical carrier signal and the tributary electrical signals, wherein the optical IQ modulator has an in-phase (I) arm and a quadrature (Q) arm, each arm being arranged to receive a respective one of the tributary electrical signals such that one of said tributary electrical signals drives the I arm of the optical IQ modulator and the other of the tributary electrical signals drives the Q arm of the optical IQ modulator to thereby encode the communications traffic bit streams onto the optical carrier signal in a multilevel modulation format having a second bit rate, that is an aggregate of the two communications traffic bit stream, and in which the second bit rate is higher than the first bit rate, and an optical signal source for the modulation format conversion apparatus, the optical signal source being arranged to generate the optical carrier signal, wherein the at least one delay element is an optical delay line provided before the respective optical to electrical signal conversion apparatus. 8. A method of converting a plurality of tributary optical communications signals having a first bit rate into an optical line signal having a second, higher bit rate, the method comprising: a. receiving separately a set of tributary optical signals, the set comprising first and second binary amplitude modulated tributary optical signals, each carrying a respective communications traffic bit stream at a first bit rate; b. converting each amplitude modulated tributary optical signal into a corresponding amplitude modulated tributary electrical signal carrying the respective communications traffic bit stream; c. synchronising the communications traffic bit streams; and d. receiving an optical carrier signal at an optical IQ (in-phase and quadrature) modulator having an in-phase arm (I) and a quadrature (Q) arm, and driving the I arm with one of the tributary electrical signals, and driving the Q arm with the other of the tributary electrical signals, to thereby encode the communications traffic bit streams onto the optical carrier signal in a multilevel modulation format having the second bit rate, that is an aggregate of the two communication traffic bit patterns, wherein the synchronising the communications traffic bit streams comprises applying a delay to at least one of the tributary optical signals to synchronise the communications traffic bit streams, and wherein the delay is an optical delay th
using optical overhead, e.g. overhead processing · CPC title
Time-division multiplex systems · CPC title
Digital modulation, e.g. differential phase shift keying [DPSK] or frequency shift keying [FSK] · CPC title
Wavelength-division multiplex systems · CPC title
Combination of different modulation schemes · CPC title
Related publications grouped by family.
Answers are generated from the same data shown on this page.