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On Fri, 19 May 2006 14:24:07 -0500, Tom Ring
wrote: And a web search produced a couple very good links out of the first 20. One was a great discussion of problems in long optical fibers, and some relatively simple ways to work around some of them, or at least to mitigate them. Hi Tom, In my early days in this game (late 80s), I sought to turn lemons into quantum-aide. That is, I sought erbium doped fiber optics to amplify nanowatt fluorescence signals with 10 to 50 µS decay times. Not one of those off-the-shelf commodities, however; so I had to amplify in the conventional way with an PMT. For those interested, long haul communications fiber optics (transoceanic grade) met with the same requirements for amplifiers placed along the length to maintain S+N/N. Erbium doped fibers were projected as a solution. You could pulse UV into the fiber to charge it, and a IR data pulse would be amplified, continuously along its length. The IR data pulse would be boosted by the previous charge of energy. This is an example of forward Raman scattering and is called Raman Amplification (which at the time would have been about 30dB and 10% efficient). 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
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