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Re: New High Fiber Count Deep Sea Cables


From: Rod Beck <rod.beck () unitedcablecompany com>
Date: Mon, 1 Feb 2021 15:13:08 +0000

I think that report is a summary of the thinking that led to the new higher count cables. In fact, those researchers 
work for the companies that laid those cables.

The new cables are based on the ideas outlined in that paper? spacing regen farther apart, putting fewer waves on each 
fiber pair so nonlinearities can be avoided, etc.

-R.

________________________________
From: NANOG <nanog-bounces+rod.beck=unitedcablecompany.com () nanog org> on behalf of Mark Tinka <mark@tinka.africa>
Sent: Monday, February 1, 2021 3:22 PM
To: nanog () nanog org <nanog () nanog org>
Subject: Re: New High Fiber Count Deep Sea Cables



On 2/1/21 12:30, Rod Beck wrote:
Here is the intellectual foundation or underpinnings of the  new deep sea design which are enabling fiber pair counts 
as high as 24.

I think the engineers might enjoy this.

https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/8369356

This is from 2018 - the submarine cable industry has come a long way since then :-).

Channel spacing on marine systems has always been the game. Adding intelligence into branching units (BU's), as well as 
improvements in amplifier design has been a contributory factor as well.

What is interesting, now, is that in lieu of copper, aluminium is being preferred as a conductor, to lower build costs.

Mark.

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