We investigate via experiments and simulations the statistical properties and the accumulation of nonlinear transmission impairments in coherent systems without optical dispersion compensation. We experimentally show that signal distortion due to Kerr nonlinearity can be modeled as additive Gaussian noise, and we demonstrate that its variance has a supra-linear dependence on propagation distance for 100 Gb/s transmissions over both low dispersion and standard single mode fiber. We propose a simple empirical model to account for linear and nonlinear noise accumulation, and to predict system performance for a wide range of distances, signal powers and optical noise levels.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAn empirical phase noise channel model suitable for performance evaluation of high spectrally efficient modulations in 100G long-haul coherent optical transmission systems using polarization-division multiplexed and wavelength-division multiplexing channels is presented. The derivation of the model is worked out by exploiting the similarity between the power spectral density of the carrier extracted from the analysis of propagation measurements and the Lorentzian spectrum that is usually adopted to describe instabilities of semiconductor lasers. The proposed channel model is characterized by only two parameters: the linewidth of the carrier and the signal-to-noise ratio.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF