<p><P>Telephone, telefax, email and internet -- the key ingredient of the inner workings is the conduit: the line which is designed to carry massive amounts of data at breakneck speed. In their data-carrying capacity optical fiber lines beat other technologies (copper cable, microwave beacons, satel
Fiber Optics: Physics and Technology
โ Scribed by Fedor Mitschke (auth.)
- Publisher
- Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg
- Year
- 2016
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 350
- Edition
- 2
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
This book tells you all you want to know about optical fibers: Their structure, their light-guiding mechanism, their material and manufacture, their use.
It began with telephone, then came telefax and email. Today we use search engines, music downloads and internet videos, all of which require shuffling of bits and bytes by the zillions. The key to all this is the conduit: the line which is designed to carry massive amounts of data at breakneck speed. In their data carrying capacity optical fiber lines beat all other technologies (copper cable, microwave beacons, satellite links) hands down, at least in the long haul; wireless devices rely on fibers, too.
Several effects tend to degrade the signal as it travels down the fiber: they are spelled out in detail. Nonlinear processes are given due consideration for a twofold reason: On the one hand they are fundamentally different from the more familiar processes in electrical cable. On the other hand, they form the basis of particularly interesting and innovative applications, provided they are understood well enough. A case in point is the use of so-called solitons, i.e. special pulses of light which have the wonderful property of being able to heal after perturbation.The book will take you from the physical basics of ray and beam optics, explain fiber structure and the functions of optical elements, and bring you to the forefront of both applications and research. The state of the art of high speed data transmission is described, and the use of fiber optic sensors in metrology is treated. The book is written in a pedagogical style so that students of both physics and electrical engineering, as well as technicians and engineers involved in optical technologies, will benefit. The new edition is largely updated and has new sections on nonlinear phenomena in fibers as well as on the latest trends in applications.
โฆ Table of Contents
Front Matter....Pages i-xiv
Front Matter....Pages 1-1
A Quick Survey....Pages 3-13
Front Matter....Pages 15-16
Treatment with Ray Optics....Pages 17-28
Treatment with Wave Optics....Pages 29-53
Chromatic Dispersion....Pages 55-85
Losses....Pages 87-98
Front Matter....Pages 99-99
Manufacturing and Mechanical Properties....Pages 101-116
How to Measure Important Fiber Characteristics....Pages 117-132
Components for Fiber Technology....Pages 133-169
Front Matter....Pages 171-171
Basics of Nonlinear Processes....Pages 173-223
A Survey of Nonlinear Processes....Pages 225-243
Front Matter....Pages 245-245
Applications in Telecommunications....Pages 247-298
Fiber-Optic Sensors....Pages 299-310
Front Matter....Pages 311-311
Decibel Units....Pages 313-316
Skin Effect....Pages 317-318
Bessel Functions....Pages 319-322
Optics with Gaussian Beams....Pages 323-327
Relations for Secans Hyperbolicus....Pages 329-330
Autocorrelation Measurement....Pages 331-336
Back Matter....Pages 337-349
โฆ Subjects
Optics and Electrodynamics;Laser Technology, Photonics;Microwaves, RF and Optical Engineering
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
<p><P>Telephone, telefax, email and internet -- the key ingredient of the inner workings is the conduit: the line which is designed to carry massive amounts of data at breakneck speed. In their data-carrying capacity optical fiber lines beat other technologies (copper cable, microwave beacons, satel
<span>Book by Mitschke, Fedor</span>
<p><P>Telephone, telefax, email and internet -- the key ingredient of the inner workings is the conduit: the line which is designed to carry massive amounts of data at breakneck speed. In their data-carrying capacity optical fiber lines beat other technologies (copper cable, microwave beacons, satel
Telephone, telefax, email and internet - the key ingredient of the inner workings is the conduit: the line which is designed to carry massive amounts of data at breakneck speed. In their data-carrying capacity optical fiber lines beat other technologies (copper cable, microwave beacons, satellite li
The author trys to explain the technology to someone totally strange to this field in a simplified and sometimes technically incorrect way. Good for general readers. Senior high students, mightbe. Thinking a job in this field? either technical or not. Get a more technical and less-misleading title!