press releaseIssue Date16 September 2008Feed for Nokia SiemensShare Release |
press releaserelease detailVerizon and Nokias Siemens Network: 100G field trialWhen: September 25, 2008 at 11:45 a.m. CEST Where: ECOC 2008 - Brussels, Belgium Who: Glenn Wellbrock, Director, Optical Transport Network Architecture and Design, Verizon Background: A major milestone has been achieved with 111 Gbit/s Optical Networks deployed over a distance of 1,040 kilometers September 16, 2008 - At the European Conference on Optical Communication (ECOC) Verizon and Nokia Siemens Networks will present a common paper on 100 Gbit/s optical networking based on a field test in Verizon’s network. The test involved the transmission of wavelength channels carrying multiple data rates (10 Gbit/s, 40 Gbit/s, 100 Gbit/s) over 1,040 kilometers on deployed fibre -- an industry first. In March 2008, Verizon and Nokia Siemens Networks completed a successful field trial demonstrating the 111 Gbit/s approach. The test involved the insertion of 111 Gbit/s channels in spectral positions that are adjacent to other channels carrying 10 Gbit/s and 40 Gbit/s data rates, with a line system that had only been designed for 10 Gbit/s transmission. The 111 Gbit/s used advanced optical techniques allowing a 100 Gbit/s data channel to occupy a very narrow spectral width and to accommodate spacing between channels of only 50 GHz, resulting in a total useable capacity of 80 channels. The trial also demonstrated that 100 Gbit/s traffic can be simultaneously transported with any mix of 10 Gbit/s and 40 Gbit/s on a typical 80-channel system. As a result, current network configurations can support capacity upgrades to 100 Gbit/s on existing routes over similar distances without modification to the physical network, providing quicker and more cost effective implementation. Like Verizon’s previous 100 Gbit/s trial in late 2007, this trial also carried the 100 Gbit/s signal on a single wavelength, demonstrating true 100 Gbit/s in a serial configuration on just one transmission wavelength. (The paper was commonly written by Verizon, Nokia Siemens Networks, TU Eindhoven and the University of the German Federal Armed Forces in Munich) Ends Media Enquiries Nokia Siemens Networks Verizon About Nokia Siemens Networks About Verizon
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