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Full Name | Alessandro Festa |
Organization | IPG Photonics |
Job Title | Dr. |
Country |
Forum Replies Created
I am sorry, i did not read carefully that yoy meant 66 dpsk and 67 RZ dpsk…I apoligize for my answer.
Regards,
Alessandro
Hi, I am not an expert at all on SOA so my previous reply was actually about EDFA-RAMAN.
Do you have any particular design requirements?
Hi Swadapdeep,
of course hybrid amplification can also be applied to TDM systems…this type of amplification is suitable for any optical signal.
Do you have in mind any particular system?
Best Regards,
Alessandro
Hi Denanjan,
you are welcome! I suppose the example with 66% is the same as 67%…this modulation is actually 2/3 which can be approximated with 66% or 67%!
Best Regards,
Alessandro
Hi Gaganpreet, I agree with you and this is why I originally posted my question…
I noted that if a post remains unanswered for a couple of days, it will not get any chance to be answered anymore.
From Damian response it seems they will not change this, maybe it would just be good to make it clearer that the selection between New and Recent Discussion is important in the main page!
Best Regards,
Alessandro
Hi Maha,
I am not sure that the required features are available in the old v7 you are using. You might try to download the evaluation version of the newest revision (v14) and see if they work.
Regards,
Alessandro
Hi Damian,
thanks for your quick reply! I now understand why you made that separation.
Best Regards,
Alessandro
You are welcome Alitsu. I actually was not aware of this before reading the article I linked!
Best Regards,
Alessandro
I definetely think that Optiwave needs to give a look at this component…thank to Damian for his quick response.
Regards,
Alessandro
Hi,
I found an interesting article at this link (http://ee.stanford.edu/~jmk/pubs/RZ.PSD.JLT.pdf) saying that 67% RZ and CSRZ are the same…
Ok I understand!
Hi Gnana, I do not see your project file attached.
10dBm – 0dBm is 10mW-1mW = 9mW = 9.5dBm.
Regards,
Alessandro
Hi Gnana, actually you should have 13dBm by summing 10dBm + 10dBm.
In fact 10dBm=10mW, so 10mW+10mW = 20mW which is 13dBm.
Best Regards,
Alessandro
Ok Gaganpreet, I cannot find your .osd in this discussion so if you share it I can maybe help you.
Looking forward to your file,
Alessandro
Thanks Damian!