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Parametric Amplifier Shows Potential for Telecom

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Breck Hitz

The erbium-doped fiber amplifier (EDFA) was one of the most important enabling technologies behind the fiber optic telecommunications boom of the 1990s. Because optical signals are attenuated as they travel through fiber, they must be periodically amplified, and EDFAs excel in that role. They provide gain across the necessarily wide bandwidth of tens of nanometers, typically from 1530 to 1565 nm (i.e., the telecom C-band).  But the gain EDFAs provide is uneven across their bandwidth, so complicated gain-flattening filters are required for spectrally smooth amplification. Researchers around...Read full article

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    Published: November 2005
    Glossary
    erbium-doped fiber amplifier
    An optical fiber that can be used to amplify an optical input. Erbium rare earth ions are added to the fiber core material as a dopant in typical levels of a few hundred parts per million. The fiber is highly transparent at the erbium lasing wavelength of two to nine microns. When pumped by a laser diode, optical gain is created, and amplification occurs.
    Communicationserbium-doped fiber amplifierfiber optic telecommunicationfiber opticsResearch & Technology

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