Zobrazeno 1 - 5
of 5
pro vyhledávání: '"R. L. Maybach"'
Autor:
Noboru Edagawa, D. A. Gray, C. R. Davidson, Hiriharu Wakabayashi, Shu Yamamoto, Neal S. Bergano, Patrick R. Trischitta, Masatoshi Suzuki, Hideaki Tanaka, G. M. Homsey, D. J. Kalmus, Hidenori Taga, R. L. Maybach
Publikováno v:
Conference on Optical Fiber Communication/International Conference on Integrated Optics and Optical Fiber Communication.
The Erbium-doped fiber amplifier (EDFA) will make possible reliable transoceanic optical communication systems that are transparent to bit-rate. Such systems have the potential to be upgraded after installation by making changes to the terminals. Sev
Autor:
D. J. Kalmus, C. R. Davidson, Shu Yamamoto, Neal S. Bergano, G. M. Homsey, Y. Namihira, Shigeyuki Akiba, Patrick R. Trischitta, Y. Horiuchi, Jennifer Aspell, Noboru Edagawa, T. Kawazawa, Y. Yoshida, Hidenori Taga, D. A. Gray, R. L. Maybach
Publikováno v:
Optical Amplifiers and Their Applications.
The next generation of undersea transmission systems will use Erbium-doped fiber amplifiers (EDFAs) to boost signals periodically as the signals travel across the world’s oceans[1] [2] AT&T and KDD have constructed a joint experiment to aid in the
Publikováno v:
Optical Society of America Annual Meeting.
We report error-free transmission for a 10 Gb/s 215-1 NRZ signal over 2000 km of dispersion-shifted fiber using 28 optical amplifiers. The bit rate distance product of 20 Tb-km/sec is the highest yet reported for a straight-line experiment.[1][2]
Autor:
R. L. Maybach
Publikováno v:
Mathematics and Computers in Simulation. 8:193-196
The technique of steepest descent can be used to generate the inverse of a function with standard analog or hybrid computer components. The resulting system is often free from the instability problems that plague inverse function generation by implic
Autor:
R. L. Maybach
Publikováno v:
Mathematics and Computers in Simulation. 9:176-181
This report describes the circuit design of a new hybrid analogdigital statistical averaging computer used to calculate statistical averages of analog voltages presented to it. The unit, with a dynamic range of +/- 10 volts, an acucracy of +/- 0.25 p