Andrew Stark
Georgia Institute of Technology
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Publication
Featured researches published by Andrew Stark.
Journal of Lightwave Technology | 2012
Jie Pan; Cheng Liu; Thomas Detwiler; Andrew Stark; Yu-Ting Hsueh; Stephen E. Ralph
Superchannel WDM systems employ narrow channel spacing to achieve high spectral efficiency and increase channel capacity. Additionally, these systems attempt to avoid inter-channel interference (ICI) and inter-symbol interference (ISI), by creating and maintaining both spectral and temporal orthogonality. This in turn imposes a strong requirement on the spectral amplitude and phase of the received signals. For Nyquist-WDM systems, the temporal shapes are Nyquist pulses, requiring uniform spectral density with flat phase. In practice, these requirements are only partially achieved, resulting in non-ideal Nyquist systems with inter-channel interference (ICI). We propose and demonstrate two joint ICI cancellation methods based on our new “super receiver” architecture, which jointly detects and demodulates multiple subchannels simultaneously. The maximum a posteriori (MAP) algorithm is most readily implemented for systems with channel spacing equal to the baud rate, and the adaptive linear equalizer is effective for all channel spacings. Simulation results show that both joint ICI cancellation schemes outperform conventional linear equalization, approaching the performance of an isolated single channel.
Journal of Lightwave Technology | 2012
Yu-Ting Hsueh; Andrew Stark; Cheng Liu; Thomas Detwiler; Sorin Tibuleac; Mark Filer; Gee-Kung Chang; Stephen E. Ralph
100G dense wavelength-division multiplexing networks with reconfigurable optical add-drop multiplexers (ROADMs) enable dynamically reconfigurable networks and are therefore part of the solution needed to meet increasing bandwidth and routing flexibility requirements for transport networks. ROADMs, in particular cascaded ROADMs, also incur penalties including those induced by passband narrowing, frequency drift, and imperfect isolation. As networks migrate toward denser wavelength assignments in search of higher capacity, these issues will become more challenging. Here, passband and in-band crosstalk effects for long-haul ROADM-enabled 112 Gb/s polarization division multiplexing quadrature phase shift keying systems are examined. We investigate the pulse format dependence for passband narrowing/frequency detuning. We also demonstrate a spectral weighting method to evaluate crosstalk penalties for widely varying crosstalk spectral content. Our experimental results demonstrate that the conventional crosstalk metric is insufficient. Finally, we demonstrate experimentally and in simulation a nonlinearity-enhanced crosstalk penalty that results from the nonlinear parametric interaction between the primary signal and crosstalk. We show that this penalty is more limiting than the nonlinear interactions between signal and amplified spontaneous emission noise.
Journal of Lightwave Technology | 2013
Andrew Stark; Yu-Ting Hsueh; Thomas Detwiler; Mark Filer; Sorin Tibuleac; Stephen E. Ralph
We demonstrate that the transmission BER, OSNR penalty, and system margin can be accurately predicted for multiple fiber types using the back-to-back response together with the Gaussian Noise model of nonlinear penalties. We first experimentally quantify the 1600 km link performance of SMF, MDF, and LAF fiber types in a coherent, WDM PDM-QPSK system at both 28 and 32 GBaud employing all-EDFA amplification and nearly identical span lengths to isolate fiber performance effects. We quantify the BER, OSNR transmission penalty, and link margin versus per-channel launch power in both linear and nonlinear transmission regimes. We demonstrate that the total system performance can be directly and accurately predicted using the fiber parameters α, D, and γ, the number spans and noise figures, and back-to-back performance of the transmitter-receiver pair. We also show that the system margins scale as (α |D|/γ2)1/3 as predicted by the Gaussian Noise model of nonlinear penalties in uncompensated systems.
IEEE Photonics Technology Letters | 2011
Yu-Ting Hsueh; Andrew Stark; Mark Filer; Thomas Detwiler; Sorin Tibuleac; Gee-Kung Chang; Stephen E. Ralph
We demonstrate a method of quantifying the penalty of in-band crosstalk that accounts for the varying spectral content. Experimentally evaluated penalties for widely varying crosstalk spectral content are shown to be readily predetermined based on the crosstalk spectral content and power within a single 112 Gb/s polarization-division multiplexing quadrature phase-shift keying (PDM-QPSK) link. Optical signal-to-noise ratio (OSNR) penalties predicted using a weighted crosstalk correlated with experimental results to within 1 dB for 8 spans AllWave [standard single-mode fiber (SSMF)] or TrueWave [nonzero dispersion fiber (NZDF)] links with different dispersion maps. Moreover, we identify a nonlinearity-enhanced crosstalk effect that is evident in the nonlinear transport regime and induce additional crosstalk-induced ONSR penalty.
Optical Engineering | 2013
Feng Tian; Xiaoguang Zhang; Lixia Xi; Andrew Stark; Stephen E. Ralph; Gee-Kung Chang
Abstract. Based on recirculating frequency shifter, we generate 20 high-quality multicarrier optical combs with a tone-to-noise ratio >25 dB. We also experimentally demonstrate 2.56-Tb/s, polarization division multiplexing return-to-zero 16-ary quadrature amplitude modulation, coherent optical wavelength division multiplexing transmission over 800 km standard single-mode fiber with 25-GHz channel spacing, and the spectrum efficiency is 5.1 b/s/Hz.
IEEE\/OSA Journal of Optical Communications and Networking | 2015
Pierre Isautier; Kedar Mehta; Andrew Stark; Stephen E. Ralph
We propose a new architecture for coherent intradyne optical receivers that autonomously identifies and decodes OOK, BPSK, QPSK, and 16-QAM modulation formats. The architecture robustly determines the total accumulated chromatic dispersion, the symbol rate that is not tightly constrained, the number of distinct modulated polarizations, and the modulation format using higher-order statistics of the sampled signal. Thus, unknown signals from noncooperating transmitters, including legacy transmitters, can be optimally demodulated yielding minimum BER. Experimental single-channel signals transmitted through 1056 km of large-area fiber are demodulated with the new autonomous receiver with essentially identical performance compared to receivers with prior knowledge of the modulation format.
optical fiber communication conference | 2013
Jie Pan; Andrew Stark; Cheng Liu; Stephen E. Ralph
A computationally efficient frequency domain implementation of a fractionally-spaced equalizer with inter-channel spectral alignment is proposed for inter-channel-crosstalk cancellation. The algorithm is an essential component of crosstalk cancellation and reduces the complexity without sacrificing performance.
Journal of Lightwave Technology | 2012
Andrew Stark; Yu-Ting Hsueh; Steven M. Searcy; Thomas Detwiler; Cheng Liu; Mark Filer; Sorin Tibuleac; Gee-Kung Chang; Stephen E. Ralph
A nonlinear penalty threshold that contains the total nonlinear phase shift is examined as a criterion for scaling fiber optic links. We investigate 112 Gb/s PDM-QPSK hybrid optical networks consisting of either TrueWave (G.655) or AllWave (G.652) fiber. We establish experimental and simulation environments with robust absolute matching in both linear and nonlinear regimes. We identify both XPM and SPM penalties in 0% and 100% inline dispersion compensation schemes for the two different fiber types. Both experimental and simulation results reveal that 0% inline-compensated links operate with larger nonlinear threshold for increasing span count and readily yield simple design rules.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2011
Thomas Detwiler; Steven M. Searcy; Andrew Stark; Bert Basch; Stephen E. Ralph
Nonlinear refraction in fiber optic links is a capacity limiting mechanism, whereby the phase of each propagating signal is modulated by intensity variations of signals in nearby channels. The transition to coherent detection enables a wide variety of modulation formats to be considered. Indeed, the choice of modulation format plays a primary role in determining the degree of amplitude variation in the channel as well as the robustness to the phase noise impairment that nonlinearities induce. On one hand, constant envelope formats (or nearly-constant) avoid fluctuations in the signal and produce lower nonlinearity-based impairments. Alternatively, star-QAM modulation formats enhance the receivers robustness to phase noise. Using simulated and experimental results we demonstrate the effectiveness of each format in avoiding fiber nonlinearity effects for both standard fiber (17ps/nm-km) and NZDF (5 ps/nm-km). We show sensitivity of several formats to nonlinear phase modulation from adjacent channels. We show the interaction between dispersion and constant envelope formats that guides the applications in which constant envelope formats, such as continuous phase modulation (CPM) provide gain over non-constant formats, such as QPSK. Consideration is made to scaling to 100 Gb/s and beyond in practical implementations.
european conference on optical communication | 2010
Thomas Detwiler; Andrew Stark; Yu-Ting Hsueh; Steven M. Searcy; Bert Basch; Robert Lingle; Gee-Kung Chang; Stephen E. Ralph
We demonstrate Offset-QPSK transmitter and receiver architectures for 112 Gb/s coherent optical networks, highlighting similarities and differences to QPSK implementations. Experimentally we demonstrate that O-QPSK exhibits an enhanced immunity to nonlinearities when transmitted over TrueWave® fiber links.