Paper
9 December 2002 Characterization of gigabit ethernet over highly turbulent optical wireless links
Gary W. Johnson, John P. Cornish, Jeffrey W. Wilburn, Richard A. Young, Anthony J. Ruggiero
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Abstract
We report on the performance characterization and issues associated with using Gigabit Ethernet (GigE) over a highly turbulent 1.3 km air-optic lasercom links. Commercial GigE hardware is a cost-effective and scalable physical layer standard that can be applied to air-optic communications. We demonstrate a simple GigE hardware interface to a single-mode fiber-coupled, 1550 nm, WDM air-optic transceiver. TCP/IP serves as a robust and universal foundation protocol that has some tolerance of data loss due to atmospheric fading. Challenges include establishing and maintaining a connection with acceptable throughput under poor propagation conditions. The most useful link performance diagnostic is shown to be scintillation index, where a value of 0.2 is the maximum permissible for adequate GigE throughput. Maximum GigE throughput observed was 49.7% of that obtained with a fiber jumper when scintillation index is 0.1. Shortcomings in conventional measurements such as bit error rate are apparent. Prospects for forward error correction and other link enhancements will be discussed.
© (2002) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Gary W. Johnson, John P. Cornish, Jeffrey W. Wilburn, Richard A. Young, and Anthony J. Ruggiero "Characterization of gigabit ethernet over highly turbulent optical wireless links", Proc. SPIE 4821, Free-Space Laser Communication and Laser Imaging II, (9 December 2002); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.450644
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Cited by 4 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Forward error correction

Scintillation

Receivers

Mirrors

Transmitters

Wavelength division multiplexing

Error analysis

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