Cover image for Optical networking best practices handbook
Title:
Optical networking best practices handbook
Personal Author:
Publication Information:
Hoboken, NJ : John Wiley & Sons, 2007
ISBN:
9780471460527

Available:*

Library
Item Barcode
Call Number
Material Type
Item Category 1
Status
Searching...
30000010132874 TK5103.59 V32 2007 Open Access Book Book
Searching...

On Order

Summary

Summary

Optical Networking Best Practices Handbook presents optical networking in a very comprehensive way for nonengineers needing to understand the fundamentals of fiber, high-capacity, high-speed equipment and networks, and upcoming carrier services. The book provides a practical understanding of fiber optics as a physical medium, sorting out single-mode versus multi-mode and the crucial concept of Dense Wave-Division Multiplexing.


Author Notes

JOHN R. VACCA, MS, MBA, is an information technology consultant and internationally known author. He has authored more than forty books and hundreds of articles in a wide range of technologies, including telecommunications, software, intelligence systems, and networks. His book The World's 20 Greatest Unsolved Problems was named one of Amazon.com's Best Books of 2004. Mr. Vacca was also a configuration management specialist, computer specialist, and the computer security official (CSO) for NASA's space station program (Freedom) and the International Space Station Program, from 1988 until his early retirement from NASA in 1995. Additionally, he is also an Independent online book reviewer and was one of the security consultants for the MGM movie Antitrust .


Table of Contents

Foreword
Preface
Acknowledgments
1 Optical Networking Fundamentals
1.1 Fiber Optics: A Brief History in Time
1.2 Distributed IP Routing
1.3 Scalable Communications: Integrated Optical Networks
1.4 Lightpath Establishment and Protection in Optical Networks
1.5 Optical Network Design Using Computational Intelligence Techniques
1.6 Distributed Optical Frame Synchronized Ring (doFSR
1.7 Summary and Conclusions
2 Types of Optical Networking Technology
2.1 Use of Digital Signal Processing
2.2 Optical Signal Processing for Optical Packet Switching Networks
2.3 Next-Generation Optical Networks as a Value Creation Platform
2.4 Optical Network Research in the IST Program
2.5 Optical Networking in Optical Computing
2.6 Summary and Conclusions
3 Optical Transmitters
3.1 Long-Wavelength VCSELs
3.2 Multiwavelength Lasers
3.3 Summary and Conclusions
4 Types of Optical Fiber
4.1 Strands and Processes of Fiber Optics
4.2 The Fiber-Optic Cable Modes
4.3 Optical Fiber Types
4.4 Types of Cable Families
4.5 Extending Performance
4.6 Care, Productivity, and Choices
4.7 Understanding Types of Optical Fiber
4.8 Summary and Conclusions
5 Carriers' Networks
5.1 The Carriers' Photonic Future
5.2 Carriers' Optical Networking Revolution
5.3 Flexible Metro Optical Networks
5.4 Summary and Conclusions
6 Passive Optical Components
6.1 Optical Material Systems
6.2 Summary and Conclusions
7 Free-Space Optics
7.1 Free-Space Optical Communication
7.2 Corner-Cube Retroreflectors
7.3 Free-Space Heterochronous Imaging Reception
7.4 Secure Free-Space Optical Communication
7.5 The Minimization of Acquisition Time
7.6 Summary and Conclusions
8 Optical Formats: Synchronous Optical Network (SONET)/ Synchronous Digital Hierarchy (SDH), and Gigabit Ethernet
8.1 Synchronous Optical Network
8.2 Synchronous Digital Hierarchy
8.3 Gigabit Ethernet
8.4 Summary and Conclusions
9 Wave Division Multiplexing
9.1 Who Uses WDM?
9.2 Dense Wavelength Division Multiplexed Backbone Deployment
9.3 IP-Optical Integration
9.4 QoS Mechanisms
9.5 Optical Access Network
9.6 Multiple-Wavelength Sources
9.7 Summary and Conclusions
10 Basics of Optical Switching
10.1 Optical Switches
10.2 Motivation and Network Architectures
10.3 Rapid Advances in Dense Wavelength Division Multiplexing Technology
10.4 Switched Optical Backbone
10.5 Optical MEMS
10.6 Multistage Switching System
10.7 Dynamic Multilayer Routing Schemes
10.8 Summary and Conclusions
11 Optical Packet Switching
11.1 Design for Optical Networks
11.2 Multistage Approaches to OPS: Node Architectures for OPS
11.3 Summary and Conclusions
12 Optical Network Configurations
12.1 Optical Networking Configuration Flow-Through Provisioning
12.2 Flow-Through Provisioning at Element Management Layer
12.3 Flow-Through Circuit Provisioning in the Same Optical Network Domain
12.4 Flow-Through Circuit Provisioning in Multiple Optical Network Domain
12.5 Benefits of Flow-Through Provisioning
12.6 Testing and Measuring Optical Networks
12.7 Summary and Conclusions
13 Developing Areas in Optical Networking
13.1 Optical Wireless Networking High-Speed Integrated Transceivers
13.2 Wavelength-Switching Subsystems
13.3 Optical Storage Area Networks
13.4 Optical Contacting
13.5 Optical Automotive Systems
13.6 Optical Computing
13.7 Summary and Conclusions
14 Summary, Conclusions, and Recommendations
14.1 Summary
14.2 Conclusion
14.3 Recommendations
Appendix: Optical Ethernet Enterprise Case Study
A.1 Customer Profile
A.2 Present Mode of Operation
A.3 Future Mode of Operation
A.4 Comparing the Alternatives
A.5 Summary and Conclusions
Glossary
Index