Optical link
An optical link is a telecommunications link that consists of a single end-to-end optical circuit. A cable of optical fiber, possibly concatenated into a dark fiber link, is the simplest form of an optical link.
Other forms of optical link can include single-"colour" links over a wavelength division multiplex infrastructure, and/or links that use optical amplifiers to compensate for attenuation over long distances.
Other forms of optical links include free-space optical telecommunication links.
In the rail transport sector, optical links are used in two forms depending on whether the feeding station is a main station or not. Thus main stations are called 'long halls', and all remaining stations are said to be 'short halls'.
See also
- 100 Gigabit Ethernet
- 10 Gigabit Ethernet
- Active cable
- Cloud computing
- CXP (connector)
- C Form-factor Pluggable
- Data center
- Fibre channel
- Fiber-optic communication
- Green computing
- HDMI
- High-performance computing
- InfiniBand
- InfiniBand Trade Association
- Interconnect bottleneck
- Light Peak
- List of device bandwidths
- Optical interconnect
- Optical communication
- Optical cable
- Optoelectronics
- Parallel optical interface
- Photo diode
- PIN diode
- PCI Express
- Small form-factor pluggable transceiver
- Terabit Ethernet
- Transimpedance amplifier
- VCSEL
References
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Monday, August 17, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.