| United States Patent |
5,815,295
|
|
Darcie
,   et al.
|
September 29, 1998
|
Optical communication system with improved maintenance capabilities
Abstract
A communication system where a central module repetitively sends
interrogation optical pulses to endpoint modules in order to determine
operational state of the endpoint modules and of the two-way communication
path to the central module. Those pulses also determine whether the
endpoint module wishes to initiate communication with the central office.
In the endpoint module, a modulator whose function is to send data from
the customer's terminal is arranged to operate in two distinct modes. When
it is "powered off", which is when the customer terminal is inactive, it
allows central office signals to loop-back to the central office. In this
state, the optical pulses sent by the central office serve the function of
optical continuity checking. When an endpoint module wishes to establish a
connection, i.e., the customer terminal wishes to "make a call", the
modulator is arranged to interpose itself in the loop-back path and inform
the central module of its desire, such as by temporarily turning off the
path to the central. When the optical interrogation pulses fail to return
to the central office, the central module knows that either the endpoint
module is wishing to make a call, or a break exists in the communications
path. The central module assumes that the endpoint module desires to make
a call and responds by sending an acknowledgment. Thereafter, the endpoint
module can proceed with communication.
| Inventors:
|
Darcie; Thomas Edward (Middletown, NJ);
Frigo; Nicholas J. (Atlantic Highlands, NJ);
Magill; Peter D. (Freehold, NJ)
|
| Assignee:
|
Lucent Technologies Inc. (Murray Hill, NJ)
|
| Appl. No.:
|
728253 |
| Filed:
|
October 8, 1996 |
| Current U.S. Class: |
398/72; 398/49; 398/82 |
| Intern'l Class: |
H04J 014/02 |
| Field of Search: |
359/124,125,164,167,173,117,118,119,120,128
340/825.54
385/17,24
|
References Cited [Referenced By]
U.S. Patent Documents
| 4435705 | Mar., 1984 | Stevens | 340/825.
|
| 4730301 | Mar., 1988 | McMahon | 359/125.
|
| 4781427 | Nov., 1988 | Husbands et al. | 359/125.
|
| 4787693 | Nov., 1988 | Kogelnik et al. | 359/119.
|
| 4946244 | Aug., 1990 | Schembri | 359/157.
|
| 5212577 | May., 1993 | Nakamura et al. | 359/124.
|
| 5221983 | Jun., 1993 | Wagner | 359/125.
|
| 5537239 | Jul., 1996 | Sotom et al. | 359/125.
|
| 5559624 | Sep., 1996 | Darcie et al. | 359/125.
|
Primary Examiner: Bacares; Rafael
Parent Case Text
RELATED APPLICATION
This is a division of application Ser. No. 08/439,059 filed May 8, 1995 now
abandoned which is a continuation in part of application Ser. No.
08/333,926 filed Nov. 3, 1994, now U.S. Pat. No. 5,559,624, which itself
is a continuation of application Ser. No. 08/029,724 pending, titled
"Optical Network Based on Remote Interrogation of Terminal Equipment",
filed Mar. 11, 1993 (henceforth, Darcie 8-1-3), which is assigned to the
assignee of the instant application and is hereby incorporated by
reference.
Claims
We claim:
1. Apparatus comprising:
a coupler arrangement responsive to an input signal S arriving at an input
port, which signal includes a carrier that is modulated with data destined
to the apparatus, the coupler arrangement delivering a first signal
corresponding to M.times.S, where M is a constant, and a second signal
corresponding to N.times.S, where N is a constant;
a detector responsive to the first signal, detecting said data;
a processing/control arrangement responsive to the detector for
receiving data detected by the detector,
applying signals developed from the data received from the detector to a
data output port,
receiving signals at a data input port, and
outputting data signals to be transmitted; and
a modulator responsive to the second signal and to the data signals of the
processing/control arrangement, modulating said second signal with the
data signals to form a modulated upstream signal and applying the
modulated upstream signal to an output port.
2. The apparatus of claim 1 where M+N approaches 1.
3. The apparatus of claim 1 where M>1.
4. The apparatus of claim 1 where N>1.
5. The apparatus of claim 1 further comprising a smoother within the
coupler arrangement that substantially obliterates the data destined to
the apparatus that is contained in the second signal.
6. The apparatus of claim 1 further comprising an amplifier within the
coupler arrangement that causes the multiplicative constant N to be
sufficiently large so that, because of non-linearity effects within the
amplifier, the second signal converts to data-less carrier signal.
7. The apparatus of claim 1 comprising a smoother interposed between the
coupler arrangement and the modulator and also responsive to data detected
by the detector, for substantially obliterating the data destined to the
apparatus that is contained in the second signal.
8. Apparatus comprising:
a coupler arrangement responsive to an input signal S arriving at an input
port, which signal includes a carrier that is modulated with data destined
to the apparatus, the coupler arrangement delivering a first signal
corresponding to M.times.S, and a second signal corresponding to
N.times.S, where M and N are constants;
a detector responsive to the first signal, detecting said data;
a modulator responsive to the second signal and to upstream data signals
destined to be transmitted out of the apparatus, modulating said second
signal with the upstream data signals to form a modulated upstream signal
and applying the modulated upstream signal to an output port.
9. Apparatus comprising:
a coupler responsive to an input signal S arriving at an input port, which
signal includes a carrier that is modulated with data destined to the
apparatus, the coupler developing a first signal corresponding M.times.S,
and a second signal corresponding to N.times.S, where M and N are
constants;
a detector responsive to the first signal, detecting said data;
a hardware unit that, in response to the second signal, to a first control
signal, and to a second control signal, develops an upstream signal at an
output port of the apparatus, which upstream signal corresponds to
said second signal, when said first control signal is at a first logical
value
said second signal modulated by said second control signal, when said first
control signal is at a second logical value.
10. The apparatus of claim 9 where the second control signal belongs to the
set that contains an activation control signal and data signals destined
to be transmitted to said output port.
11. The apparatus of claim 9 wherein said hardware unit comprises a
modulator.
12. The apparatus of claim 9 wherein said hardware unit comprises
a modulator,
a combiner responsive to the modulator, and
a router for applying the second signal to the modulator when the first
control signal is at a first level and to the combiner when the first
control signal is at a second level.
13. The apparatus of claim 12 wherein the modulator is an active modulator
that is responsive to a power signal and a data signal.
14. The apparatus of claim 12 where the combiner delivers output signal of
the modulator to the output port when the first control signal is at a
first level, and delivers the signal of the router delivered to the
combiner when the first control signal is at a second level.
15. The apparatus of claim 9 wherein said hardware unit comprises:
a modulator,
a switch/modulator,
a combiner responsive to the modulator and to the switch/modulator, and
a router for applying the second signal to the modulator when the first
control signal is at a first level and to the switch/modulator when the
first control signal is at a second level.
16. The apparatus of claim 9 wherein the hardware unit comprises:
a modulator,
a switch/modulator,
a combiner responsive to the modulator and to the switch/modulator, and
a splitter for applying a first portion of the second signal to the
modulator and a second portion of the second signal to the
switch/modulator.
17. The apparatus of claim 16 where the switch/combiner is responsive to
the first control signal and to the second control signal.
18. The apparatus of claim 17 where the switch combiner is a combination of
a switch and a modulator.
19. The apparatus of claim 9 where the hardware unit comprises:
a coupler/switch having a first port responsive to said second signal, a
second port coupled to the output port, a third port coupled to a
reflective modulator, and a fourth port coupled to a reflector, with the
coupler/switch arranged to send signals from said first port to said
modulator when the first control signal is at a first level, and to said
reflector when the first control signal is at a second level.
Description
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTON
1. Field of the Invention
This invention related to optical communication networks.
2. Description of Prior Art
One approach for creating optical networks involves the use of a passive
optical network (PON) in which there are no active components between a
hub communication point, such as a central office, and an end
communication point, such as a subscriber's terminal equipment. A feeder
fiber from the central office provides a downstream optical signal to a
remote distribution module, or node, (RN) that splits the optical signal
for distribution onto a number of optical fibers, and each of the fibers
terminates in an Optical Network Unit (ONU). The latter converts the
received optical signal into electrical form and delivers it to either one
or a number of subscribers
The Darcie 8-1-3 application discloses a passive photonic loop arrangement
where the central office employs wavelength division multiplexing (WDM) to
form an optical signal for downstream transmission. That is, the
information for each ONU is multiplexed onto an optical signal of the
particular wavelength assigned to the ONU, thereby forming an
information-bearing optical signal, and the information-bearing optical
signals for the other ONUs (each having its own wavelength) are combined
to form the WDM signal.
Illustratively, each of the different wavelength signals is generated from
a different laser.
The WDM optical signal is received by the RN, where it is demultiplexed
into individual optical signals of particular wavelengths and each
individual optical signal is then routed to its associated ONU, which may
also be wavelength sensitive. The ONU employs a fraction of the received
signal to detect the information that the central office was
communicating, and employs the remainder of the received signal as a
carrier for information that is transmitted by the ONU to the central
office. Thus, the ONU does not need to have a light source of its own to
serve as a carrier signals. Expressed another way, the central office
creates a carrier signal which is used to communicate information
downstream (when there is such information to be communicated) and which
is also used to communicate information upstream (when there is such
information to be communicated). Viewed another way, the central office
effectively interrogates each ONU with the downstream optical signal, and
allows each ONU to transmit its upstream information.
One feature of the system disclosed by Darcie 8-3-1 allows the use of a
time-division multiplexing protocol that is decoupled from, or independent
of, the ONU. As a result, the ONU does not have to have any predefined
information about the time-division multiplexing protocol. This increases
the flexibility of the central office to allocate system resources like
bandwidth. Another feature of the system allows the use of subcarrier
modulation of the transmitted optical signal to mitigate the effects of
optical path delay (e.g., collision) on the upstream optical signal and to
permit routing of signals at the ONU and the central office.
In addition, the disclosed system allows the central office to perform
enhanced fault detection. In the embodiment described above, for example,
there is effectively an unbroken optical circuit from the laser in the
central office to an optical receiver in the central office, and this
provides the central office with access to the entire optical loop.
In another copending application, Ser. No. 08/366,849, titled "A Passive
Optical Network With Bi-Directional Optical Spectral Slicing and
Loop-Back", filed Dec. 30, 1994 (Darcie 14-10-3), an arrangement is
disclosed where information is transmitted from the ONU to the central
office at a wavelength that is different from the wavelength at which
information is sent by the central office, but the loop-back to the
central office is maintained and it is used for evaluating continuity of
the communication path to and from the ONU. This is accomplished by the
central office sending a test signal at a wavelength that is different
from the normal signal wavelength used to communicate to the ONU and
different from the signal wavelength that is used to communicate from the
ONU. The ONU loops it back, and the central office detects the returned
signal as a confirmation of the path's continuity. Should the signal not
return, conventional optical time domain reflectometry (OTDR) techniques
may be employed to pin-point the break (or failure of the ONU). OTDR is
described, for example, in J. M. Senior "Optical Fiber Communications" pp.
822-827 (Prentice Hall). This application is also incorporated by
reference.
While use of a different wavelength for evaluating fiber continuity has
certain advantages, there is also an advantage to not using a carrier of a
different wavelength for that purpose because, in the latter case, no
additional laser is required in the central office. However, it is not
desirable to keep a central office carrier signal active all the time,
because it consumes power.
SUMMARY
In accordance with the disclosure herein, the desire to confirm continuity
of the bi-directional communication path between the central office and
ONU is coupled with the process of establishing communication from the ONU
and the central office. In the disclosed system, which follows the general
mode of operation of the system disclosed in Darcie 8-1-3, when there is
no active communication between the central office and the ONU, the
central office repetitively sends an interrogation optical pulse to the
ONU (at the ONU's assigned wavelength). Those pulses perform two
functions: to determine whether the ONU wishes to initiate communication
with the central office, and to report to the central office on the
continuity of the communications path to and from the ONU.
In the ONU, a modulator whose function is to relay data from the customer's
terminal is arranged to operate in two distinct modes. When it is "off",
which is when the customer terminal is inactive, it allows central office
signals to loop-back to the central office much like disclosed in the
Darcie 8-1-3 application. In this state, the optical pulses sent by the
central office serve the function of optical continuity checking. When an
ONU wishes to establish a connection, i.e., the customer terminal wishes
to "make a call", the modulator is arranged to interpose itself in the
loop-back path and thereby inform the CO of its desire. One approach for
informing the CO that a connection to some remote customer terminal is
desired is to temporarily block the path to the central office by placing
the modulator within the ONU in a state that prevents the return of the
carrier to the CO. This can be done by applying an appropriate modulation
signal to the modulator or, in the case of active modulators, by
withholding the application of power to the modulator.
When the optical interrogation pulses fail to return to the central office,
the central office knows that either the ONU is wishing to make a call, or
a break exists in the communications path (the fiber broke, or the ONU
failed). To distinguish between the two possible causes, the central
office assumes that the ONU is signaling a desire to make a call and
responds by sending a carrier signal with information corresponding to a
"dial tone" in conventional telephony circuits. When, in fact, the
condition is that of the ONU wishing to make a call, the ONU receives the
dial tone and responds by reopening the loop-back path to the central
office. Consequently, a portion of the dial tone is returned to the
central office, the central office detects the returned dial tone, and
that serves as a confirmation that the central office's assumption was
correct. When the failure of the optical pulse to return to the central
office is caused by a system failure, the dial tone is also not returned
to the central office and the latter failure serves as notice to the
central office that a true failure exists.
The optical communication system of this invention includes a coupler
responsive to an input signal arriving at an input port, wherein the
signal includes a carrier that is modulated with data. The coupler
develops a first signal corresponding to the input signal multiplied by a
constant M and a second signal corresponding to the input signal
multiplied by a value N. The optical communication system also includes a
detector responsive to the first signal and which detects the data, and a
processing/control arrangement responsive to the detector. The
processing/control arrangement receives the data detected by the detector,
applies the signals related to the received data to a data output port,
receives signals at a data input port, and outputs the data signals. The
optical communications system further includes a modulator responsive to
the second signal and to the data signals of the processing/control
arrangement, wherein the second signal is modulated with data signals to
form a modulated upstream signal which is applied to an output port.
Various other capabilities and features that relate to maintenance, system
control, communication control, etc. are disclosed.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING
FIG. 1 is a block diagram of a passive optical communications system in
accordance with the principles disclosed herein;
FIG. 2 shows time slots, the shallow modulation mode, gaps between time
slots, and different data rates in different time slots;
FIG. 3 shows the deep modulation mode that may be employed by ONU 100;
FIG. 4 presents one design of modulator 140;
FIG. 5 depicts a system configuration employing subcarriers;
FIG. 6 illustrates interrogation pulse control within CO 10;
FIGS. 7-11 present another designs for modulator 140; and
FIGS. 12A-12G illustrate various time slot formats.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
FIG. 1 presents a block diagram of an optical fiber communications system
that comprises a local digital switch or hub, such as central office (CO)
10, remote node (RN) 90, and a number of optical network units, or ONUs,
represented by ONU 100, ONU 200, ONU 300 and ONU 400. While it is not
necessary, it is convenient to assume that all of the ONUs, or endpoints,
are essentially identical in design, although each ONU may have different
capabilities. Accordingly, only ONU 100 is shown in detail. CO 10 provides
downstream optical signals over fibers to the RNs, such as optical fiber
11 connected to RN 90. Within RN 90, the downstream optical signal is
split, i.e., demultiplexed, and the separate developed optical signals are
provided to the various ONUs that are connected to the RN via optical
fibers, such as ONU 100 which is connected to RN 90 via optical fiber 96.
Each ONU can provide service to a number of subscribers, or customers,
provided the signals destined to the different subscribers are carried by
fiber 96 and can be separated out (e.g. by demultiplexing) at the ONU and
delivered to the different subscribers. For the purposes of this
description, only one subscriber is discussed, with data out line 121 to
the subscriber and data in line 119 from the subscriber.
Turning now to the upstream direction, RN 90 receives an optical signal
over an optical fiber from each ONU, e.g., on optical fiber 91 from ONU
100. RN 90 combines (i.e., mixes) the optical signals from each ONU and
provides a single upstream optical signal to CO 10 over optical fiber 12.
Except as described below, it is assumed CO 10 functions as in the prior
art systems in providing services to each of the subscribers associated
with each ONU. For example, CO 10 is able to provide a digital equivalent
of plain old telephone service (POTS) between a called party, e.g., the
subscriber associated with ONU 100, and a calling party, which might
access CO 10 over facility 14 or from another ONU. Facility 14 is
representative of any number of facilities that couples CO 10 to a
telecommunications network (not shown); e.g., an inter-office trunk.
Similarly, the data services can range from providing a simple data
connection between terminal equipment of the subscriber associated with
ONU 100 and a computer system (not shown), or the provisioning of video or
multimedia services to a subscriber associated with ONU 100.
As shown in FIG. 1, CO 10 comprises CO processor 15, frequency tunable
optical transmitter 20, sequencer 30 and optical receiver 40. Transmitter
20 includes a light source (optical carrier) and a modulator with an
electronic signal on line 16 modulating the optical carrier. The optical
carrier is developed under control of signal line 31 in a tunable optical
signal generator (e.g. tunable laser) or in plurality of lasers that are
turned "on" by the signal(s) on line(s) 31. CO processor 15 provides the
data that is destined to the ONUs that are coupled to RN 90. That is, the
data delivered by line 16 is synchronized to sequencer 30 so that when
sequencer 30 causes transmitter 20 to operate at the wavelength assigned
to ONU 100, the data on line 16 corresponds to the data that needs to be
delivered to ONU 100. Frequency tunable transmitter 20 can be constructed
as taught, for example, in "Discretely Tuned N-Frequency Laser for Packet
Switching Applications Based on WDM," B. Glance et al., Electron. Lett.,
vol. 27, pp. 1381-1383, 1991. For the transmitter 20 structure described
above (e.g., tunable transmitter), sequencer 30 most naturally operates
transmitter 20 in a time division multiplexing mode, as depicted in FIG.
2. There is a plurality of time slots, and each times slot contains
optical signals of different wavelength: a first wavelength during a time
slot t.sub.1, a second wavelength during a time slot t.sub.2, a third
wavelength during a time slot t.sub.3, etc. It may be observed that a
strictly WDM system is also possible, where a plurality of lasers are each
independently modulated and their outputs are combined. The operation of
such a system closely parallels the TDM system described above and is
conceptually simpler so, for sake of brevity, only the latter is described
in detail. Skilled artisans can, of course, apply the teachings herein to
a strictly WDM system.
Although the time slots shown in FIG. 2 are of equal duration, that is not
a requirement. The data, or information, impressed onto the carrier during
each time slot is destined, typically, to a different ONU and the
modulation technique depicted in FIG. 2 is that of intensity modulation
(i.e., ASK), with a low modulation index. In this, shallow modulation
depth, a logic 1 is represented with a carrier at full intensity, and a
logic 0 is represented with the carrier at intensity level 0.8. Of course,
other modulation techniques are also possible. The freedom to have time
slots of any length offers one degree of control for providing different
bandwidths to different ONUs and customers. Another degree of control for
adjusting bandwidth is the freedom to employ different data rates at each
of the different time slots. This control is illustrated in FIG. 2 by the
different widths of the pulses appearing in the amplitudes of the carrier
signals.
Although the above describes an RN 90 where signals of only one specific
wavelength are directed to ONU 100, that is also not a requirement. A
remote node can be employed where a number of wavelengths are directed to
a particular ONU, as disclosed, for example, in the aforementioned Darcie
14-10-3 copending application. Of course, the ONU will generally include
wavelength division demultiplexing means to separate out the different
wavelength signals. One benefit of an arrangement where more than one
wavelength is directed to a particular ONU is a greater flexibility that
is available in distributing services to customer terminals which are
connected to a particular ONU. Another benefit is a distinct maintenance
channel, as disclosed in detail in the aforesaid copending application.
Aside from being able to make a "go--no go" determination, various other
maintenance operations can be carried out without disturbing normal
communication with ONU 100, such as measuring power margin (i.e.,
determining how close the system is to becoming inoperative should the
carrier signal power diminish). Measuring power margin can be done, for
example, by dividing a time slot into segments and in each segment sending
a carrier signal of progressively lower intensity (amplitude). When the
sent signal returns to the CO (as described in the aforementioned Darcie
8-1-1 application, also described in detail below), the signal of segments
with signal intensity lower than detectable by receiver 40 will, by
definition, not be detected, and the last-detected segment would indicate
to the CO the power margin that is present in the system. This measurement
does not have to be done at a different wavelength, of course. As
indicated below, it may be part of the standard maintenance tools that are
employed even in systems that send a single wavelength signal to each ONU.
The transmitted optical signal from CO 10 is accepted by RN 90. In FIG. 1,
the latter comprises wavelength division multiplexer/router (WDM/R) 95,
such as, for example, described in "An N.times.N Optical Multiplexer Using
a Planar Arrangement of Two Star Couplers," C. Dragone, IEEE Phot.
Technol. Lett., vol. 3, pp. 812-815, 1991; and in "Integrated Optics
N.times.N Multiplexer on Silicon," C. Dragone, C. A. Edwards, and R. C.
Kistler, IEEE Phot. Technol. Lett., vol. 3, pp. 896-899, 1991. WDM/R 95
has linearity and reciprocity properties that allow all the light paths to
be reversed. That is, light with wavelength .lambda. applied to fiber 11
is routed to fiber 96, and light with the same wavelength applied to fiber
96 is routed to fiber 11. However, since in some applications it is
advantageous to physically separate the upstream and downstream optical
signals, WDM/R 95 differs from standard WDMs in that it can be configured
to comprise a second set of ports for upstream transmission, as
represented by optical fibers 91 through 94 and optical fiber 12. Of
course, in the upstream path the signal must be combined, rather than be
split up. This can be achieved with a simple power combiner, since the
signal timing and wavelengths are dictated by the CO (although there would
be splitting losses). Alternatively, the upstream combining can be
wavelength selective (without splitting losses). An intrinsic feature of
WDM/R 95 is that it accomplishes wavelength selective combining in a
manner "slaved" to the concomitant wavelength separation performed on
FIGS. 11 and 96-99.
Returning to the description of FIG. 1, ONU 100 accepts the light applied
by optical fiber 96 with receiver/modulator 140. The latter comprises
passive tap coupler 105, detector 110, and modulator 115. Passive tap
coupler 105 splits the incoming light into two signals for application to
optical paths 106 and 107. Only a small portion of the incoming light is
needed by detector 110 and, therefore, the bulk of the incoming light
(e.g., 80%) can be diverted to path 107. Optical path 106 applies its
optical signal to optical detector 110, where the optical signal is
detected, converted to an electrical signal, and sent on path 111. Path
111 provides this electrical signal to processor 120, which further
conditions and processes the signal to provide a subscriber "data out"
signal representative of the respective downstream information, via path
121. Optical path 107 applies its signal to optical modulator 115. This
signal is the carrier signal that is modulated and sent back to CO 10. The
carrier signal is modulated, e.g., ASK, with the data signal that the
customer equipment (communicating through processor 120) wishes to sent to
CO 10.
It may be noted that processor 120 releases its information to modulator
115 only during periods that processor 120 determines (in response to
signals from detector 110) that the carrier signal is present. In
applications where the optical carrier of modulator 115 comes directly
from coupler 105, it must be taken into account that the carrier may
contain an information component, which is the information that was sent
by the central office to ONU 100. To differentiate between this
information and the data applied by path 143, and keeping in mind that the
AM modulation by CO 10 has a low modulation index, one approach for
modulating in element 115 is to use a high modulation index, or a "deep
modulation depth". This is illustrated in FIG. 3.
Alternatively, the carrier signal applied to modulator 115 can be stripped
of its data content (i.e., the data destined to detector 110). This can be
done, for example, by including an optical amplifier in path 107 that goes
into saturation. Stripping the data off the carrier can also be done with
a feedback circuit that takes the output of detector 110 and remodulates
the carrier appearing in path 107 to reverse the action of the CO's
modulator. This is shown in FIG. 4, with element 130 interposed in path
107. As indicated above, "carrier smoother" 130 may be an amplifier or a
modulator that is responsive to a feedback signal from detector 110.
Carrier smoother 130 can also be incorporated in modulator 115. That is,
the modulation signal on line 143 can be superimposed with data developed
by detector 110.
The information-bearing optical signal developed by modulator 115 is
applied to RN 90 via path 91. There, the signal is combined with signals
from other ONUs and, together, they form the optical signal on path 12
which is sent to CO 10.
In may be noted in passing that the CO inherently knows from which ONU the
data is arriving because it is carried on the very same signal that was
sent by the central office to a specific ONU. Still it may be advantageous
for processor 120 to include information in the data stream. That data can
identify processor 120, or the source of the information relayed by
processor 120, etc.
It may also be noted that the optical fibers from the different ONUs to RN
90 may differ in optical path length. One possible consequence of
different length fibers is that data in a time slot t.sub.i which
immediately follows time slot t.sub.i-1 out of the central office, is not
necessarily in the same time relationship with data in time slot t.sub.i-1
when it returns to the central office. There may an overlap with time slot
t.sub.i-1, or there may be a gap between the two time slots. The overlap
can results in collisions at optical receiver 40 between the data of time
slot t.sub.i and the data of time slot t.sub.i-1. These collisions can be
avoided in any number of ways.
One approach for avoiding these collisions is for CO processor 15 to take
into account the various time delays before transmission of any downstream
information; i.e., transmit time slots with appropriately timed gaps.
Another approach is to sequence the data in downstream time slots arranged
in increasing order of distance from the RN. Such an approach retains time
order at the cost of introducing "dead time" in the downstream signal.
Another approach is to subcarrier modulate the packets in each time frame.
This is shown in FIG. 5. The only differences between FIG. 1 and FIG. 5
are voltage controlled oscillator (VCO) 50, mixer 55, and RF filter bank
45 of CO 10. The downstream signal on path 16 is sub-carrier modulated by
mixer 55 at one of a few frequencies. In other words, the downstream
signal is shifted from a base-band frequency to a radio-frequency (RF)
band. At the same time that sequencer 30 signals transmitter 20 to change
the transmitter's wavelength, sequencer 30 also changes the frequency of
VCO 50. Consequently, transmitter 20 modulates its light output with RF
bursts at each particular frequency. The amplitude of each RF burst
represents "ones" and "zeroes" in a manner similar to the "baseband"
description of FIG. 1. The number of subcarrier frequencies need not be
greater than the largest number of overlapping time slots.
Still another approach is to use a plurality of wavelength sensitive
optical receivers (in other words, employ a WDM approach at the receiver)
but subcarrier filters (e.g., 65, 75, and 85) are typically less expensive
than tuned receivers.
From the above it should be understood that while it is essential that an
ONU have "some" time slot in a time frame, the details about which time
slot is being used is irrelevant to any particular ONU. In other words,
since an ONU does not transmit anything back to the CO until it receives
an optical signal from the CO, the ONU does not have to have any a priori
knowledge about the time-division multiplexing assignments used by a
central office. As a result, the time-division multiplexing format, both
in terms of amount of time dedicated to an ONU and the sequence of
transmissions by the central office to an ONU, can be varied in any
fashion desired by the CO without requiring a change to the ONU equipment.
This results in no synchronization requirements between CO 10 and an ONU,
and allows CO 10 to provide "bandwidth on demand". If ONU 100 signals a
need for extra bandwidth and ONU 200 is not busy, the length of time that
the central office's laser transmits at the wavelength associated with ONU
100 can be doubled by using the time slot assigned to ONU 200. This kind
of reassignment of slots does not require recomputation and
reconfiguration of any network synchronization scheme and all of the ONUs
are unaware that anything has happened.
The above describes the arrangement shown in FIG. 1 without detailed
reference to actually how communication takes place between the central
office and a subscriber terminal that is coupled to processor 120. The
following describes one mode of operation.
In accordance with the arrangement disclosed herein, CO 10 continually
monitors the integrity of the paths to all the ONUs within its realm, such
as ONU 100. It does so with a sequencer 32, shown in FIG. 6, which
includes a control line 19 emanating from processor 15 in addition to
control line 17. Whereas control line 17 directs sequencer 32 to control
transmitter 20 to operate at a particular wavelength, as described
previously in connection with FIG. 1, control line 19 merely gates the
signal of sequencer 32. More specifically, control line 19 causes CO 10 to
output a train of bursts, or interrogation pulses, of the carrier signal
at the wavelength specified by control line 17. The interrogation pulses
may be only a few percent of a time slot's duration (perhaps even less
than 1%), and this reduces the power consumption of the CO laser
significantly. The interrogation pulses can be at any rate, but one simple
approach is to position one interrogation pulse at the beginning of each
time slot.
Alternatively, in arrangements where no time slots are employed (such as in
a strictly WDM system, the interrogation pulses can go at any rate
whatsoever. Modulator 115 optically depicted in FIG. 1 is a transmissive
modulator, which can be passive or active. A passive modulator requires no
power to pass a carrier signal from path 107 to path 116. An active
modulator requires power, but it may also provide gain. Gain is desirable
in many applications and, therefore, a simple active modulator may be
appropriate. On the other hand, when the modulator is powered "off" (or
the ONU itself loses power), it effectively cuts the optical signal path.
In many applications it is desirable to continuously test the integrity of
the signal path and this requires a path through the modulator (even when
the ONU is not communicating upstream). However, the need to provide a
source of continuous power is not welcome, and that holds particularly
true when the integrity testing can be done with an interrogation pulse,
as described above, which is active relatively seldom (e.g., very low duty
cycle). Continuously powering the modulator in such an arrangement is
truly wasteful of power.
FIG. 7 presents one arrangement where an active modulator is employed which
does not require the expenditure of power in order for the CO to test
continuity of the path to ONU 100 and back. It comprises a bypass fiber
123 and "single pole, double throw" optical switches 125 and 126. The
switches are under electrical control of line 128 (emanating from
processor 120) and are arranged to pass the optical signals of path 107 to
path 116 either through fiber 123 or through modulator 115. That control
may be coupled to the application of power to modulator 115, but as will
be disclosed below, there are distinct advantages to have that control be
independent. The FIG. 7 modulator is an active, transmissive, modulator.
Switches 125 and 126, by the way, can be as simple as electromechanical
switches. Of course, they can also be more sophisticated, such as Lithium
Niobate electro-optical switches.
FIG. 8 presents another embodiment, where switch 126 is replaced by coupler
129, and FIG. 9 presents still another embodiment (using a reflective
modulator) where a single switch, 125, is used. Many other variations are
possible, of course, such as a two switch arrangement using a reflective
modulator. The FIG. 9 arrangement is useful in systems that employ a
"downstream" fiber and a separate "upstream" fiber (e.g., 107 and 116), as
well as in systems where a single fiber is used for both "upstream" and
"downstream" transmissions (e.g., only fiber 107).
Returning to FIG. 7, the arrangement accepts the optical bursts which
arrive at the ONU and are passed onto fiber 107 and forwards those bursts
to path 116. According to the teachings above, the CO detects the return
of those optical bursts, and from that detection determines that the path
to and from ONU 100 is operative. Taking advantage of the independent
control over power line 127 and control line 128, processor 120 can employ
the following operational schema.
When the customer terminal that is coupled to processor 120 is not in use,
control line 128 includes fiber 123 in the signal path and power line 127
maintains modulator 115 in a "power off" state.
When the customer terminal detects incoming information (with detector 110)
and concludes that it wishes to send information to the CO (e.g., the
central office is applying a "ringing signal" and the customer terminal
chooses to go "off hook"), then modulator 115 is included in the signal
path (excluding fiber 123 from the signal path) and is powered "on".
When, in the absence of a signal from the CO (other than the repetitive
optical bursts), the customer terminal wishes to send information to the
CO (e.g. to dial out and make a call), then modulator 115 is included in
the signal path (excluding fiber 123 from the signal path) but modulator
115 is kept in its "power off" state, or the modulator power is turned
"on" but the modulation signal on line 143 is set to its minimum
transmissiveness level (i.e., the modulation is effectively turned "off").
With such a schema in place, the CO can effectively employ the
interrogation pulse notion disclosed above. When such pulses are sent to
the ONU, CO 10 expects a return of the interrogation pulses, to confirm
that the system is operational. When the interrogation pulses do not
return, the CO knows that either the system failed or that the customer
equipment placed the modulator of FIG. 7 in the signal path but withheld
power to the modulator. According to the above protocol, the latter
indicates that the customer's terminal has gone "off hook". The proper
response by the CO to this condition is to provide a "dial tone" signal to
the customer terminal. The dial tone can be generated at CO processor 15
and a digital signal that corresponds to a dial tone can be applied to
line 16. Alternatively, CO processor 15 can send a code to processor 120,
and processor 120 can generate the dial tone locally. Of course, processor
120 must turn modulator 115 power "on" for it to send the dialing signals
to CO 10. Processor 15 responds to the dialing signals in a conventional
manner. The called party specified by the dialing signals is coupled to
processor 15 (perhaps via facility 14) and communication proceeds. What
that means is that, instead of the short interrogating bursts, the CO
provides an appropriate duration optical signal carrier during the time
slots that communicate with the calling party at ONU 100. In the course of
such "normal" communication, when signals are sent to the called party
(the party not at ONU 100) the carrier from the CO to the ONU is modulated
with signals from processor 15, and when the calling party (the customer
at ONU 100) is transmitting a signal the optical carrier signal that flows
back to the CO is modulated by 115.
The monitoring of the "health" of the communication path can continue even
in the absence of interrogation pulses because there is sufficient energy
in the returned signal to serve the needs of the circuit that does the
monitoring. Stated in other words, the fact that communication is taking
place is sufficient indication that the system is operational. The
evaluations that are necessary for performing the monitoring function are
carried out, of course, in receiver 40 and CO processor 15. Receiver 40
detects the optical signals, demultiplexes the subcarriers, demodulates
the signals, and converts the resulting baseband signals to electrical
form. Processor 15 takes the electrical digital signals developed by
receiver 40 and analyzes them in a conventional manner (e.g. using
filters, accumulators and threshold detectors) to determine whether a
returned signal is present at the time it is expected to appear at fiber
12.
In the event that the CO provides a "dial tone" (or a code indicative
thereof) but no dialing signals are detected in response, the CO concludes
that there is a failure in the tested path and, then, OTDR or a similar
process can be initiated. OTDR processes are well known, and are
referenced in the above-identified Darcie 14-10-4 application.
It may be noted that the monitoring of the communication path even during
an active connection between a customer terminal coupled to ONU 100 and
some other customer terminal has a benefit other than just the knowledge
gained by the maintenance system the system continues to be operational.
For example, this monitoring can be used to detect "end of conversation"
condition, or to detect a "hook flash" condition. The manner of such
detection is effectively as before. On the ONU side, when the customer
terminal executes a "hook flash" or terminates the communication,
processor 120 turns power off to modulator 115 (for a short predetermined
time, in the case of a "hook flash", or permarrently, for an "end of
conversation" condition) but keeps modulator 115 in the path of fibers
107-116. When CO processor determines that the continuous carrier signal
has not returned for an interval greater than a preselected threshold
(because modulator 115 was turned "off"), it first makes the tentative
conclusion that it sees a "hook flash". When the carrier signal resumes
its return to the CO (when it indeed is a "hook flash" condition), the CO
confirms the conclusion that it experienced a "hook flash", and responds
accordingly in a conventional manner. When the carrier signal continues to
not return, the conclusion is made that either the customer terminal went
"on hook", or the communication path failed. Assuming the former, the CO
sends a message to processor 120 in ONU 100, directing it to confirm the
"on hook" condition. Processor 120 does so by switching modulator 115 out
of the signal path and inserting fiber 123 in the path (via control of
switches 125 and 126). Placing fiber 123 in the path allows the optical
carrier to return to the CO, which serves as the sought confirmation, and
in response thereto, the CO returns to the pulsed monitoring mode; i.e.,
returns to sending the interrogation pulses.
While the above-described process of call establishment, communication, and
call termination are couched in terms of a desire on the part of the
customer terminal and readers might envision a human user activating the
customer terminal, e.g. a telephone, it should be understood that the
processes described above can be arranged to occur upon the occurrence of
any other event, such as a fire or burglary at the home of the customer,
etc. Still other ways are available for achieving these sought results,
and it should be understood that the above is merely illustrative of the
principles disclosed herein.
FIG. 10 presents still another embodiment of receiver modulator 140, where
a transmissive modulator 115 is flanked by coupler 131 and 129, and a
switch/modulator 132 is interposed in fiber 123. Element 132 can be a
fiber, a simple "single pole single throw" mechanical switch, another
modulator, or a modulator combined with a switch (e.g., serially). There
is a particular advantage to using a passive modulator for element 132 in
that it provides a second, distinct, channel of communication to the CO.
That is, because it is passive, no expenditure of power occurs on its
behalf at ONU 100. Moreover, the signal returned to the CO is markedly
different in magnitude from the signal returned from modulator 115, and it
could be even more different if the modulation technique used is different
from that of modulator 115. For example, the signal modulating the carrier
at element 132 can be an analog signal, while the signal modulating the
carrier at element 115 can be a digital signal, or vice-versa. Also,
instead of coupler 131 and 129, either one or both can be switches, in
which case element 132 may be a mere modulator.
To a skilled artisan the possible variations are almost endless.
As for use of this enhanced capability, passive modulator 132 can be used
to monitor a home for emergency conditions, can be used to read-out
information from the home, such as reading power meters, etc. Even
mechanical modulation of the light is possible.
In operation, when element 132 does not wish to communicate and the
customer terminal is "on hook", modulator 132 is made to pass carrier
signal (i.e. is made fully transmissive) and modulator 115 is turned
"off". The CO bursts pass through element 132, and the operation is as
described before. When an emergency condition occurs and element 132
wishes to communicate information, it turns least transmissive and the CO
(in response thereto, as described before) sends a dial tone. Under
control of processor 120, element 132 sends a particular data sequence and
the CO responds accordingly. From the magnitude of the signals the CO
knows that it is modulator 132 that is communicating. The CO can,
therefore, provide appropriate compensation (e.g. gain or filtering) and
simply make the appropriate connection. In the alternative, it can accept
the data sequence as an instruction to the CO to take some predetermined
action.
In the forward direction, when the CO wishes to access information from the
customer via element 132 rather than make a full fledged connection to the
customer's terminal, it sends an alert signal to processor 120 (via
detector 110) that is different from the normal alert signal. Processor
120 responds appropriately by sending the sought information over the
element 132 channel, and the desired result is achieved. It may be noted
that the same can be accomplished by using modulator 115.
In applications where element 132 is a switch, the operation is identical
to that of FIG. 7. In applications where element 132 does not exist, which
is the case when it is said to consist of merely a fiber, the operation
must rely on a somewhat finer control of modulator 115. That is, the
above-described operation depends on having three states: a state where
the bursts are returned (fiber 123 is in the path), a state where bursts
are not returned (fiber 123 is not in the path and modulator 115 is "off),
and a state where a carrier signal is modulated at enhanced amplitude
(modulator 115 is "on"). In an arrangement where fiber 123 connects
couplers 129 and 131 directly, the three states would be a state where
bursts are returned, a state where the bursts are returned amplified
somewhat (modulator 115 is turned on, and control 128 is set to a
preselected amplification level), and a state where the carrier is
modulated. Of course, on the CO side there would be a fourth state, where
no bursts are returned at all. CO processor 15 can easily accommodate the
enhanced capabilities that the fourth state presents. It should me noted
that the arrangement where there is only a fiber between couplers 129 and
131 is likely to create interferometric noise, fading, etc.
Yet another arrangement can simply follow the FIG. 1 structure where only
control over the output of modulator 115 is employed, provided that
modulator 115 is passive. For example, when the customer terminal is "on
hook", modulator 115 can be set to a state where is passes signals
unaltered (i.e., maximum transmissive state). That allows the
interrogation pulses to return to the CO. When the customer's terminal
goes "off hook", the modulator is set at its least transmissive state, and
the CO is faced with the question of whether the terminal is "off hook" or
the signal path failed. That question is resolved as discussed above. When
communication actually takes place, the modulator modulates the carrier as
described above. Alternatively, the "off hook" condition can be specified
by some other state of the modulator, such as placing the modulator in a
medium transmissive state, alternating the modulator between minimum and
maximum transmissive states at some preselected rate (slower than the
repetition rate of the interrogation pulses), etc. The latter approach can
also be used with active modulators.
FIG. 11 presents an embodiment where the splitting of the signal that
occurs in element 105 of FIG. 1 and the modulation that occurs in element
115 are combined. Specifically, element 135 is a splitter with a built-in
optical amplifier. Based on the value of the signal on line 128, a portion
of the optical signal (amplified) that is applied by fiber 101 is directed
to path 116, and the remainder is directed to path 106. Alternatively,
element 135 can comprise a coupler of the type described above followed by
an amplifier in the output leg that goes to fiber 116.
When the communication between the customer terminal and some other
terminal is such that simultaneous transmission in both directions is not
essential then, of course, there is no need for smoother 134. When data is
being sent to detector 110, control signal 128 is at a dc level that
corresponds to the sending of no energy to path 116 and the sending of all
optical energy to detector 110. When data is being sent to the CO, control
signal 128 modulates amount of energy that is sent to path 116, and the CO
receives the sent data. Of course, the complement of the signal sent to
the CO also arrives at detector 110 (less the amplification that may be
present in the path to the CO), but detector 110 can be disabled or made
to ignore its reception.
When the communication between the customer terminal and some other
terminal needs to be fully duplex (i.e., permitting of communication in
both directions simultaneously), a smoother 134 is interposed between
element 135 and detector 110 which is under control of data line 128.
Smoother 134, which may be passive or active, removes the effects of
modulator 135, so that detector 110 sees only the data sent to it by CO
10.
Having mentioned the notions of "full duplex" communication, it should be
pointed out that the above uses the term in the sense of having a carrier
which, effectively, carries communication in both directions
simultaneously. It does not refer to the notion of communication always
flowing in both directions (such as in a conventional, analog, "plain old"
telephone service). But that notion has to be taken in light of the
general structure of the FIG. 1 system, where communication between CO 10
and ONU 100 is contemplated to occur only whenever the CO outputs a
carrier of the right wavelength, and the latter occurs as dictated by
sequencer 32 (or 30). Data signals typically have no problem with being
sent in bursts, during the appropriate time slot. Speech signals,
likewise, have no problem if some appropriate delay is acceptable. Given
that fact, the distinction between half duplex and full duplex is
effectively obliterated when the time slot during which sequencer 32
causes to CO 10 to communicate with ONU 100 is divided into a "send"
segment and a "receive" segment. If the send and receive segments are long
enough and the bandwidth during those segments is high enough to provide
the necessary overall bandwidth, then on a macroscopic level a full duplex
operation is attained even though on a microscopic level the operation is
half duplex.
With that in mind, FIG. 12 depicts various possible signal conditions
during a time slot when communication occurs with a particular ONU, such
as ONU 100. FIG. 12A depicts an interrogation pulse. FIG. 12B depicts an
interrogation pulse that is wide enough to include a reducing amplitude
segment (or a sequence or trailing pulses with a predetermined set of
generally declining amplitudes that is used to measure power margins, as
described above. FIG. 12C shows a time slot that includes segments C and
A. Segment C is a control segment, and segment A is a data segment. The
communication segment provides a communication channel that can be
employed throughout a communication session. The control segment provides
a control channel from the CO to the ONU, which can be used throughout a
communication session between a customer terminal coupled to an ONU and
some other customer terminal, or even in the absence of such a
communication session. FIG. 12D shows a control segment that includes a
power margin test. FIG. 12E shows a control segment C and communication
segments A and B. During segment A, CO 10 sends information to the ONU,
and during segment B the ONU sends information to the CO. FIG. 12F depicts
segments C, A, and B, and further shows segment C being divided into
sub-segments C1 and C2. Sub-segment C1 is a control segment where CO 10
sends control information to the ONU, and sub-segment C2 is a control
segment where the ONU sends control signals to the CO. FIG. 12F also
depicts a condition where sub-segment C1 and segment A are much smaller
than their siblings, sub-segment C2 and segment B, respectively. This
condition may be employed when the customer's terminal is one where there
is a natural disparity between the incoming and outgoing data rates, or a
condition where the actual modulated data rates are different. The latter
arrangement may be used when, for example, it is less expensive to employ
an ONU which can receive high data rates but can only transmit lower data
rates than it is to employ an ONU which can receive and transmit at the
same data rates. FIG. 12G depicts a time slot with control segments C, A
and B, and further shows that segment B is modulated at some preselected,
relatively high frequency, subcarrier. This subcarrier is effectively a
clock signal. This clock signal can be used by the CO, when it returns
with the data from the ONU (e.g. to assist in the detection of the data),
can be used by the ONU, or both.
It may be noted that a system arrangement such as disclosed in connection
with FIG. 1 is not limited to any one specific time slot format, such as
the ones shown in FIG. 12. Rather, the formats can be dynamically modified
as the need arises. For example, the FIG. 12C format may be to send a
"ringing packet" to the ONU, while FIG. 12G format is used during a
communication session.
One of the major advantages of the system disclosed above is the fact that
the ONUs are basically subservient to the CO; i.e., effectively all
control is exercised by the CO. One variable that has not been addressed
above is variations in the RN due to design tolerances and, more
significantly, variations due to temperature changes. RN routers are
typically placed outside the central office buildings and, having managed
to create an RN that is totally passive, it makes sense to allow the
placement of the RNs in the "outside plant". However, even though a
passive RN (e.g. comprising glass gratings) is a rugged device, it is
typically temperature sensitive in its wavelength selectivity. One
approach for solving the potential mismatch between the wavelengths that
are deployed by the CO and the wavelengths to which the RN is sensitive is
to monitor the RNs' responses at the CO and to modify the wavelengths of
the lasers accordingly. This additional control is shown by control line
21 in FIG. 1 which CO processor 15 applies to element 20. Internally
within CO processor 15, a software feedback loop is executed where the
wavelength at which a laser is operating while communicating with a
particular ONU is periodically modified. The output of receiver 40 is
compared to the output of receiver 40 prior to the wavelength's
modification. When the output of receiver 40 increases, the conclusion is
made that the modification was beneficial, and the succeeding modification
is made in the same direction (i.e., reducing or increasing the
wavelength, whichever was done before). When the output of receiver 40
reduces, the conclusion is made that the modification was detrimental, and
the next modification is made in the opposite direction. By this process,
the cooperation between receiver 40, CO processor 15 and element 20 under
control of signal 21 causes the output of element 20 to properly follow
the needs of the considered RN and, correspondingly, of all other RNs in
the system.
* * * * *