DWDM Tutorial
DWDM Tutorial
Abstract:
This paper deals with the twin concepts of optical networking and dense wavelength division multiplexing. The paper talks about the various optical network architectures and the various components of an all-optical network like Optical Amplifiers, Optical Add/Drop Multiplexors, Optical Splitters etc. Important optical networking concepts like wavelength routing and wavelength conversion are explained in detail. Finally this paper deals with industry related issues like the gap between research and the industry, current and projected market for optical networking & DWDM equipment and future direction of research in this field. See Also: IP Over DWDM (Student Report) | Optical DWDM Networks (Lecture by Dr. Jain) | IP over DWDM (Lecture by Dr.Jain) | References on Optical DWDM Networks and IP over DWDM | Books on WDM and Optical Networking Other Reports on Recent Advances in Networking Back to Raj Jain's Home Page
Table of Contents:
1. Introduction 1.1 Optical Networking 1.2 Dense Wavelength Division Multiplexing 2. DWDM SYSTEM 2.1 Optical Transmission Principles 2.2 Network Classification 2.3 Optical Amplifiers 2.4 Synchronization 2.5 Security 3. DWDM COMPONENTS 4. OPTICAL NETWORK ARCHITECTURE 4.1 Virtual Topology 4.2 Optical Layer and Higher Layer Interface 5. DWDM ARCHITECTURE 5.1 ATM over DWDM 5.2 IP over DWDM 6. WAVELENGTH ROUTING IN OPTICAL NETWORKS 6.1 Efficient Routing Algorithms 7. WAVELENGTH CONVERSION IN OPTICAL NETWORKS 7.1 Wavelength Conversion related Algorithms 8. MARKET SCOPE AND COMPANY PROFILE 8.1 Ciena Corporation
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8.2 Lucent Corporation 8.3 Sycamore Networks 8.4 Ericsson's ERION SUMMARY REFERENCES LIST OF ACRONYMS
1. INTRODUCTION
One of the major issues in the networking industry today is tremendous demand for more and more bandwidth. Before the introduction of optical networks, the reduced availability of fibers became a big problem for the network providers. However, with the development of optical networks and the use of Dense Wavelength Division Multiplexing (DWDM) technology, a new and probably, a very crucial milestone is being reached in network evolution. The existing SONET/SDH network architecture is best suited for voice traffic rather than todays high-speed data traffic. To upgrade the system to handle this kind of traffic is very expensive and hence the need for the development of an intelligent all-optical network. Such a network will bring intelligence and scalability to the optical domain by combining the intelligence and functional capability of SONET/SDH, the tremendous bandwidth of DWDM and innovative networking software to spawn a variety of optical transport, switching and management related products.
2. DWDM SYSTEM
As mentioned earlier, optical networks use Dense Wavelength Multiplexing as the underlying carrier. The most important components of any DWDM system are transmitters, receivers, Erbium-doped fiber Amplifiers, DWDM multiplexors and DWDM demultiplexors. Fig 1 gives the structure of a typical DWDM system.
The concepts of optical fiber transmission, amplifiers, loss control, all optical header replacement, network topology, synchronization and physical layer security play a major role in deciding the throughput of the network. These factors have been discussed briefly in this sections that follow.
Bi-directional: The channels in the DWDM fiber are split into two separate bands, one for each direction. This removes the need for the second fiber, but, in turn reduces the capacity or transmission bandwidth.
Signal Trace The procedure of detecting if a signal reaches the correct destination at the other end. This helps follow the light signal through the whole network. It can be achieved by plugging in extra information on a wavelength, using an electrical receiver to extract if from the network and inspecting for errors. The receiver the reports the signal trace to the transmitter. Taking into consideration the above two factors, the international bodies have established a spacing of 100GHz to be the worldwide standard for DWDM. This means that the frequency of each signal is less than the rest by atleast 0.1THz.
Fig.2 Ring Topology Connecting Nodes A & B Single-Hop Networks vs Multi-hop Networks Multi-wavelength networks can be also classified as single-hop networks and multi-hop networks. In single-hop networks, the data stream travels from source to destination as a light stream. There is no conversion to electronic form in any of the intermediate nodes. Two examples of a single-hop networks are the broadcast-and-select and the wavelength-routed architecture. s Broadcast-and-select networks: It is based on a passive star coupler device connected to several nodes in a star topology. Basically a signal received on one port is split and broadcast to all ports. Networks are simple and have natural multicasting capabilities. Generally used in high speed LANs or MANs. Other elements in this type of network are tunable receivers and fixed transmitters or fixed receivers and tunable transmitters. s Wavelength routed networks: The key element here is the wavelength-selective switching subsystem. There are again two types of wavelength switching. Wavelength path switching involves dynamic signal switching
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from one path to another by changing WDM routing while wavelength conversion the reuse of the same wavelength in some other part of the network as long as both lightpaths dont use it on the same fiber. Wavelength routing is explained in more detail in section [6.] In multi-hop networks, each node has access to only a small number of the wavelength channels used in the network. Fixed wavelength transmitters and receivers are used for this purpose with a minimum of atleast a single wavelength transmitter and a single wavelength receiver tuned to different wavelengths. This type of network requires atleast one intermediate node for a packet to reach the destination. Also, at each intermediate node electronic switching of packets take place. Two examples of actual multihop systems on which packet switching has been implemented experimentally are Starnet (developed by Optical Communication Research Laboratory at Stanford University) and Teranet (developed by Columbia University).
2.4 Synchronization
The SONET networks currently support the multiplexing of lower Time Division Multiplexing (TDM) rates onto higher rates. The Add/Drop Multiplexors (ADM) and transponder en route provide the much-needed synchronization. This ensures
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the quality and guarantees proper delivery of data. But, since DWDM systems support the multiplexing of different wavelengths, no timing relation exists for the system. The need for a clocking system, similar to one used in SONET, is absent. Nevertheless, synchronization may still be used for assuring good quality. The numerous regenerators/transponders and other devices in the path of a signal introduces jitter. Synchronization can be used to ensure quality by cleaning up the signals transmitted at each node. SONET terminals and ADMs have a special timing output port, which provides timing to customers. It is sometimes referred to as the Derived DS1. It is a true DS1 signal, but carries no traffic. All data bits are set to logic 1 to minimize timing jitter. A clock distribution amplifier may be used to split the Derived DS1 signal, to synchronize many network elements. In a network, each distribution amplifier output may be routed to a different network element.
2.5 Security
Optical fibers too facilitate secure connections. Quantum cryptography is one such operation, which exploits the fundamental properties of quantum complementarity (The concept that particle and wave behavior are mutually exclusive, but, are together necessary for the complete description of any phenomena) to allow two remote parties to generate a shared random bit sequence. Users can safely use their shared bit sequence as a key for subsequent encrypted communications. In conventional complexity-based approaches to security, privacy is achieved by posing a difficulty mathematical problem to the interceptor, which is computationally intensive. In contrast, Quantum Key Distribution (QKD), as it is called, provides a new paradigm for the protection of sensitive information in which security is based on fundamental physical laws. Back to Table of Contents
3. DWDM COMPONENTS
Important components of a DWDM system are the Add/Drop Multiplexor (ADM), the Optical CrossConnect (OXC), Optical Splitter. The Add/Drop Multiplexor as the name suggests, selectively adds/drops wavelengths without having to use any SONET/SDH terminal equipment. We require the ADM to add new wavelengths to the network or to drop some wavelengths at their terminating points. There are two types of implementations of the ADM, the Fixed WADM and the Reconfigurable WDM.
The Optical CrossConnect acts a crossconnect between n-input ports and n-output ports. It allows the efficient network management of wavelengths at the optical layer. The variety of functions that it provides are signal monitoring, restoration, provisioning and grooming.
Optical Splitters are being suggested for use in multicast-capable wavelength-routing switches to provide optical multicasting. It is a passive device that will help in replicating optical signals. This is explained in detail in a later section. [4.2] Optical Gateways are devices that will allow the smooth transition of traffic to the optical layer. We can have high-speed ATM networks or a mix of SONET and ATM services with such a gateway. They provide the maximum benefits of optical networks. Back to Table of Contents
Fig.5 A WDM network consisting of crossconnect nodes interconnected by pairs of point-to-point fiber optic links(i.e physcial topology)
An optical layer, also known sometimes as Layer 1, is the layer between the physical layer and the datalink layer or other higher layers for that matter. By using this additional layer in say an ATM network, we would be removing the need of having to convert to optical signal to electric signals and to cells before switching them through ATM switches, if we have
wavelength switches in the network. ITU-T SG 15 has defined the optical layer itself as consisting of layers. The three sublayers of the optical layer are: s Optical Channel(OCh) layer: This corresponds to light paths s Optical Multiplex Section(OMSn) layer: This corresponds to links s Optical Amplifier Section(OASn) layer : This corresponds to link segments between optical amplifiers. However, in [GERSTEL96] more emphasis is laid on the standardization of control and management aspects. The authors make some assumptions about the networks like low setup rate, isolation from physical constraints and routing of bi-directional lightpaths.
This structure resembles the "roundabouts" that are there on the roads in many countries. All sources needing to transmit to the same destination must share the corresponding channel. Each node is assumed to have one tunable transmitter and one fixed receiver. Hence, the MAC protocol that has been suggested for this architecture is the Synchronous Round Robin with Reservation (SR3). It has been divided into 3 heirarchical layers: access strategy using the Synchronous Round Robin (SRR) scheme, the fairness control scheme i.e the modified MultiMeta Ring (MMR) scheme and finally a reservation scheme. This SR3 scheme hence provides atleast theoretically, an almost optimal exploitation of the available resources and fair allocation of resources. The reservation scheme allows in controlling queueing delays. The experimental results of [MARSAN99] seem to indicate that delay performance is improved for both pure best-effort traffic and also a mixture of guaranteed-quality and best effort traffic. Thus, bandwidth allocation and connection establishment procedures can be easily introduced into systems whose whose traditional mode of operation is connectionless. Since this SR3 scheme allows reservation of a set of slots by nodes at call setup, it can also be used for applications with QoS requirements. Multicast capability This is an optional capability depending on whether multicasting is a feature enabled in the network. Some research has been done in this area [SAHASRABUDDHE99]. Here, the concept of a light tree is introduced. A light tree is a point-to-multipoint version of a lightpath. Optical multicasting capability at routing nodes has been suggested to increase logical connectivity and thereby further reduce the hop distances that have to be traversed. Optical multicasting is
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better than electronic multicasting because it is easier to split an optical signal into many identical optical signals rather than copying a packet in an electronic buffer. Using optical splitters does this function of "splitting" an optical signal. An n-way optical splitter is a passive device that does the above defined "splitting" in such a way that atleast one output signal has a power less than or equal to 1/n th times the input power. Optical amplifiers would be needed in the network. The suggested approach is to have a so-called splitter bank. This splitter bank will do the optical splitting and also the optical signal amplification. An interesting point is that this splitter bank could have more features such as wavelength conversion and signal regeneration for "multicast" as well as "unicast" signals in the network. Now this splitter bank is then used to construct a multicast-capable wavelength-routing switch(MWRS). The basic components of this MWRS are optical switches, splitter bank, multiplexors, demultiplexors. Information coming in through a fiber link is first demultiplexed into separate signals (different wavelengths) and then switched by an optical switch. At this point depending on whether the signal is unicast or multicast, they are sent through different paths. The multicast signals are sent to the splitter bank and the amplified multiple identical signals are then switched by another optical switch. Finally all the signals that are to be sent out on one fiber link are multiplexed together before being sent out. Mathematic formulation of the light-tree-based virtual topology design problem isthe next step. An optimization problem having any one of the following objective functions is possible: s Minimization of the network-wide average packet hop distance. s Minimization of the total number of opto-electronic components. By solving a mixed-integer linear program for this optimization problem the authors [SAHASRABUDDHE99] found that compared to the lightpath-based virtual topology, the light-tree based virtual topology scaled better for both objective functions. Uni or Bi-directional lightpaths When all wavelengths travel in the same direction within a fiber, those wavelengths are called unidirectional wavelengths(or lightpaths). The implication here is that another parallel fiber has to be there that supports the opposite direction lightpath When we have the whole channel split in such a way that for each lightpath in the forward direction there is another lightpath in the opposite direction within the same fiber, such lightpaths are known as bi-directional lightpaths. It is obvious that the transmission bandwidth is reduced. Which one of these lightpaths is chosen depends on the type of traffic.
Since failure recovery is a very important aspect of any network, network control has been proposed as a decentralized function though for the early versions a centralized function is also acceptable. Network management criteria, interfacing between network control and network management has all been properly defined. Finally, it is important to realise that there will many such WDM networks belonging to various carriers, organizations etc and for this the authors of [7] use a two-level hierarchy. This is similar to the routing protocol of ATM networks: PNNI. The two levels are as follows: 1. The lower level hierarchy is the level of the physical node and the links are physical fibers. 2. The upper level is the level where each node is actually a subnet and the links at this level are nothing but the links between two subnets. The routing protocols that could be used are similar to IGP at this level.
5. DWDM ARCHITECTURE
Using some of the basic concepts of DWDM systems, it is possible to form an All-Optical layer. Transport of Gigabit Ethernet , ATM, SONET, IP on different channels is feasible. By achieving this, the system becomes more flexible and any signal format can be connected to, without the addition of any extra equipment that acts as a translator between the formats. In this section we will talk about the various types of technologies that can be used over DWDM systems. In particular, we
Reconfigurable routers are of bounded degree, while nonreconfigurable routers may not be. That is, the complexity of non-reconfigurable networks can be ignored as it is not of a fixed degree. However, the complexity of reconfigurable networks is strongly dependent on its degree and it is bounded.
Finally, the problem of determining the number of wavelengths needed to implement any routing scheme for any network, as a function of the congestion and dilation of that network is discussed.The upper and lower bounds together given in [AGGARWAL96] and [PANKAJ95] for the various kinds of networks suggest that a more heirarchical structure in which switching nodes are separate from input/output nodes may be more promising for all-optical networks" Research work has been done in solving the problem of routing connections in a reconfigurable optical network using WDM [RAMA95]. An upper bound on the carried traffic of connections is derived for any routing and wavelength assignment(RWA) algorithm in such a network. A fixed-routing algorithm achieves this bound asymptotically. The RWA problem was formulated as an Integer Linear program (ILP). This bound was found to be good for optical network using dynamic wavelength convertors. Two routing node architectures were presented. In the first structure it was found that as the number of edges increased the reuse factor increased. Also the reuse factor with wavelength convertors was higher than that without one for small values of wavelength systems. Also it is assumed implicitly that in networks without wavelength convertors , two connections can be assigned the same wavelength as long as they dont share any link in the network. An important aspect of [RAMA95] was to find the reuse factor for larger networks as a function of the number of nodes, edges and wavelengths via simulation. Based on the results, it was inferred by the authors that it is possible to build all-optical networks without wavelength convertors. However, only a modest number of connections per node with a reasonable number of wavelengths is supported. Using 32 wavelengths it is possible to provide 10 full-duplex connections to each node in a 128-node random network with average degree 4, and 5 full-duplex connections per node in a 1000-node random network with average degree 4. Back to Table of Contents
So, we could eliminate this problem by converting data that is arriving on the link from node 1 to node 2 on 1 to 2 on the link between node 2 and node 3. Such a technique is called wavelength conversion. Functionally, such a network is similar to a circuit-switched network. For any model of optical routing, we need to make as efficient use of the given optical bandwidth that we have as possible. Wavelength convertors have been proposed as a solution to this problem. Wavelength convertors have been defined earlier in this report as those devices that convert an incoming signal's wavelength to a different outgoing wavelength thereby increasing the reuse factor. Wavelength convertors offer a 10%-40% increase in
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reuse values when wavelengths availability is small [RAMA95]. Categories of Wavelength Conversion No conversion: No wavelength shifting Full conversion: Any wavelength shifting is possible and so channels can be connected regardless of their wavelengths. Limited conversion: Wavelength shifting is restricted so that not all combination of channels may be connected. Fixed conversion: Restricted form of limited conversion that has for each node , each channel maybe connected to exactly one predetermined channel on all other links. Sparse Wavelength Conversion: Networks are comprised of a mix of nodes having full and no wavelength conversion.
cisco), Alcatel, Nortel Networks, Sycamore Networks, Adva Optical Networking , Williams Network (FLEX-UNISM ) etc
MultiWave Sentry: Allows throughput of up to 40 Gb/s. This system enables carriers to mix SONET/SDH, ATM, Fast IP, and asynchronous traffic on a common optical network.. This enables the construction of ATM and Fast IP networks without an intervening synchronous layer. http://www.ciena.com/products/1600-sentry/index.html
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Intelligent core switching: MultiWave CoreDirector™:It facilitates scalable, ultra-high density, high-capacity switching(640Gbps). An advanced set of protection and restoration capabilities allows carriers to build mesh, ring or hybrid mesh-ring optical cores without legacy SONET equipment. This product was acquired by Ciena with the purchase of Lightera. http://www.ciena.com/products/coredirector/index.html
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Harnessing core fiber capacity and delivery: MultiWave EdgeDirector™ 500: This product provides an overall solution by allowing the network providers "to offer legacy voice and new high-speed data services across an end-to-end intelligent optical network." CIENA acquired the MultiWave EdgeDirector 500 with the purchase of Omnia Communications on July 1, 1999. http://www.ciena.com/products/edgedirector/index.html
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Considering the fact that a broadband networking system will require high capacity intelligent optical switching and transport systems besides good access systems, ciena seems to be a step ahead in the race to dominate the optical networks market.
software that will dramatically increase the amount of data that servers can handle and accelerate the flow of information from a servers hard drive to the end user. OptiStarseries will replace the 45 MBps WAN connectivity with upto 2.5 GBps fiber link. r Sept 22 1999 : Lucent announces the addition of the following three new products to the existing WaveStar series: 1. WaveStar MetroPoint OLS: Point-to-point optical networking system that transmits upto 40 GBps while saving costs upto 60% in costs. 2. WaveStar AllSpectra OLS: An optical enterprise system that transmits information using lasers that are 50 % cheaper. 3. WaveStar OpticGate series: Network cards that enable data vendors to integrate Lucents high speed optics with their IP routers and ATM switches.
8.3 Sycamore Networks (http://www.sycamorenet.com) Sycamore Networks, a Massachusets based 1998 startup is the
trailblazer of 1999 in terms of optical networking products. They have the market leading products in intelligent optical networking which integrate the intelligence of SONET/SDH and the capacity of DWDM with state-of-the-art optical networking software to deliver the most flexible and cost-effective solution to public network scaling and service delivery issues. Their products include: 1. SN 6000 Intelligent Optical Transport Node: This product allows the use of the so-called "just-in-time" OC-48/STM-16 wave services optimized for private line, high-speed data applications. It provides wavelength conversion and optical multiplexing of the OC-48/STM-16 signals, which are then merged with the OC-192/STM-64 signals for transport over embedded SONET/SDH transport infrastructures. This reduces a lot of expense on SONET/SDH upgrades. 2. SN 8000 Intelligent Optical Network Node: This product supports end-to-end provisioning and management of high-speed services across all segments of the optical network. It claims a reach of 1600km without regeneration and is looking to be the preferred network node choice for optical networks. Its strongpoint is the use of the following concepts. s "Optical handoff" i.e. the transport of optical signals in the optical domain across the backbone and the backbone-access interface (hence there are no O-E-O conversions) and s "Wave sharing" i.e. an innovative method of combining multiple OC-12/STM-4 and OC-3/STM-1 services into one aggregate OC-48/STM-16 signal. 3. SILVX Optical Network Management System (ONMS): It forms the core of Sycamore's software-centric optical architecture. It delivers a scalable management platform to ensure that Sycamore's entire range of Intelligent Optical Networking products can be efficiently introduced into the network. Sycamore already has a commitment from Williams Communications to use its intelligent optical transport and switching products to provide new long haul services.
SUMMARY
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In this paper we have discussed various concepts that are integral to the development of the All-Optical Network. Various new technologies available in a DWDM system were introduced. A proposed optical layer was described in much detail. Issues such as Network Control and Network Management was also discussed. Finally the state of the market for optical networking, company profiles and research scope in optical networking and DWDM were discussed. It is very much possible that a day will come when only two optical layers will exist: WDM layer and IP layer. However, SONET equipment has two features: restoration and trouble-shooting capabilities. For this reason and also for the reason that a lot of investment into SONET has already taken place, SONET will survive. As routers become faster, it will be difficult to convert every wavelength to add or drop off bandwidth. Thus, managing 100+ wavelength systems is probably the next big challenge. Companies like Alcatel have developed OADMs. Standard bodies like ITU-T, ANSI have declared that optical standards will come into picture only after 2000. Research work is also being done to try and achieve the difficult goal of a high-speed all-optical network. New concepts such as All-optical switching are coming up. 1 Tbps systems are expected in the market by early 2002/2003. Network providers will start leasing out wavelengths (or "lambdas") instead of leasing lines. Cost will be an important issue in widespread deployment of optical systems. A lot of implementation issues, the setting up of standards need to be addressed for an all-optical network to come out at a reasonable cost. How long or for that matter whether we will ever achieve an all-optical network is a moot question. Back to Table of Contents
REFERENCES
Articles: [GERWIG98] Optical Networks: A Ray of Light, Kate Gerwig,editor: CMP Media Incs InternetWeek Ma, 4 pages, http://www.acm.org/pubs/citations/journals/networker/1998-2-4/p17-gerwig [EDN98] Optical networking lightens carrier-backbone burden, EDN Access Magazine, October 8 1998 [INTTEL99] DWDM Rising,Telephony Magazine, April 19 1999, http://www.internettelephony.com/archive/4.19.99/Cover/cover.htm ) [SAMIR99] Enlightening the effects and implications of nearly infinite bandwidth: Samir Chatterjee and Suzanne Pawlowski Comm. Of ACM June 1999 [CHATT97] Requirements for success in gigabit Networking: S. Chatterjee, ACM July 1997 [GREEN96] Optical Networking Update: P.E.Green (IEEE Journal on Selected Areas, June 1996 [WILLN97] Mining the Optical Bandwidth for a terabit per second: A.E.Willner, IEEE Spectrum, April 1997 [ALCATEL99] Optical Networks: Alcatel ,August 1999, 29 pages,(http://www.webproforum.com/wpf_all.html) [LUCENT99] Dense Wavelength Division Multiplexing Tutorial : Lucent Technologies, October 1999, 15 pages (http://www.webproforum.com/dwdm/index.html) [RYAN98] WDM: North American deployment trends: J.P. Ryan, IEEE Comm. , Feb '98 [AGAM98] Benefits of WDM and ATM: Oded Agam Director of Technical Services, Radcom Inc., Telecom Business magazine December 1998 (http://www.protocols.com/papers/wdm.htm) [Hudg96] WDM All-Optical Networks. Project Report: Janice Hudgings & Jocelyn Nee, Fall 1996 (http://www-bsac.eecs.berkeley.edu/~jnee/ee228a) [YANG98] Amplifiers at 1590nm double the DWDM bandwidth: Dan Yang, AFC Technologies, Sept 1998 (http://www.broadband-guide.com/lw/reports/report09985.html)
Papers, Internet Drafts, RFCs: [RAMA95] R.Ramaswami and Kumar N. Sivarajan Routing and Wavelength Assignment in All-Optical Networks, IEEE/ACM Transactions on Networking,vol.3., no.5,pp. 489-500, October 1995 [PANKAJ95] Rajesh K. Pankaj, Robert E. Gallagher Wavelength Requirements of All-Optical Networks: IEEE/ ACM Transactions on Networking, Vol.3, no.3, pp. 269-279, June 1995 [GERSTEL] O. Gerstel, Rajiv Ramaswami, G. Sasaki Benefits of Limited Wavelength Conversion in WDM ring networks, Proc. OFC, 1997 [CARRERA98] E.V.Carrera and Ricardo Bianchini OPTNET: A Cost Effective Optical Network for Multiprocessors, ACM,8pages, 1999 [SUBRAM96] S. Subramaniam, M. Azizoglu, A.K. Somani All-Optical Networks with Sparse Wavelength Conversion, IEEE/ACM Transactions,Vol.4, no.4, pp.544-557, Jan 1999 [AGGARWAL96]Alok Aggarwal, Amotz Bar-noy, And Don Coppersmith, R. Ramaswami, B. Schieber, Madhu Sudan Efficient Routing in Optical Networks, Journal of ACM ,43(6):973-1001, November 1996 http://theory.lcs.mit.edu/~jacm/Abstracts/aggarwalbcrss96.ltx [GERSTEL96] O.Gerstel, P.E. Green, R. Ramaswami Architecture for an Optical Network Layer,Feb 1996 [PANKAJ92] Rakesh Pankaj(MIT '92) Architectures for Linear Lightwave Networks, Ph.D Dissertation [RAMA98] R. Ramaswami, G. Sasaki, Multiwavelength Optical Networks with Limited Wavelength Conversion, IEEE/ACM Transactions, Vol.6, no.6, pp. 744-754, Dec 1998 [WILFONG98] G.Wilfong, P. Winkler ,Ring routing and Wavelength translations, ACM-SIAM Symposium on Discrete Algorithms ,pp.333-341, 1998 [KLEINBURG99] Jon Kleinburg and Amit Kumar ,Wavelength Conversion in Optical Networks,ACM-SIAM on discrete algorithms, 1999 [RAMAMURTHY98] B. Ramamurthy and B. Mukherjee ,Wavelength Conversion in WDM networking,IEEE Selected Areas in Communications Sept 1998 [AWDUCHE99] Daniel O. Awduche[UUNET(MCI World Com)], Yakov Rekhter [Cisco Systems], John Drake [Fore Systems(Marconi)], Rob Coltun [Siara Systems], Combining MPLS Traffic Engineering Control With Optical Crossconnects: , October 1999: Work in progress [MARSAN99] Marco Ajmone Marsan, Andrea Bianco, Alessandro Morabito, and Fabio Neri. Politecnico di Torino All-Optical WDM Multi-Rings with Differentiated QoS,IEEE Communications, Feb 1999 [SAHASRABUDDHE99] Laxman H. Sahasrabuddhe and Biswanath Mukherjee ,Light-Trees- Optical Multicasting for improved Performance in Wavelength-Routed Networks, IEEE Communications, Feb 1999 [SENIOR98] John M. Senior, Michael R.Handley, Mark S. Leeson , Developments in Wavelength Division Multiple Access Networking,IEEE Communications, Dec 1998 Books: [MUKHERJEE97]Biswanath Mukherjee, "Optical Communication Networks", McGraw Hill, July 1997, 575 pages, http://networks.cs.ucdavis.edu/users/mukherje/book/toc.html. [GREEN93] P.E.Green, "Fiber-Optic Networks", Prentice-Hall 1993 [GERARD98] Gerard Lachs, "Fiber-Optic Communications, McGraw-Hill Telecommunications 1998 [KEISER93]Gerd Keiser,Optical fiber Communications, McGraw-Hill 1983
LIST OF ACRONYMS
ADM ANSI ATM DBFA DWDM EBFA ERION IP ITU MMR MPLS MWRS OA OADM OASn OCh O-E-O OMSn OXC QKD UWOA RWA SDH SONET SR3 SRR TDM WAM WDM -Add/Drop Multiplexor -American National Standards Institute -Asynchronous Transfer Mode -Erbium Fiber-based Dual-band Fiber Amplifier -Dense Wavelength Division Multiplexing -Extended Band Fiber Amplifier -Ericsson Intelligent Optical Network -Internet Protocol -International Telecommunications Union -Modified MultiMeta Ring -Multiprotocol Label Switching -Multicast-capable Wavelength-Routing Switch -Optical Amplifier -Optical Add/Drop Multiplexor -Optical Amplifier Section layer -Optical Channel layer -Optical to Electronic to Optical -Optical Multiplex Section layer -Optical CrossConnects -Quantum Key Distribution -Ultra-Wideband Optical Amplifier -Routing and Wavelength Assignment -Synchronous Digital Hierarchy -Synchronous Optical Network -Synchronous Round Robin with Reservation -Synchronous Round Robin -Time Division Multiplexing -Wide Area Metro -Wavelength Division Multiplexing
Back to Table of Contents Last Modified: November 24, 1999 Note: This paper is available online at http://www.cis.ohio-state.edu/~jain/cis788-99/op_dwdm/index.html