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Assignment A

Ans.1. BASIC STRUCTURE OF AN OPTICAL FIBER


The basic structure of an optical fiber consists of three parts; the core, the cladding, and the coating or buffer. The basic structure of an optical fiber is shown
in figure 2-9. The core is a cylindrical rod of dielectric material. Dielectric material conducts no electricity. Light propagates mainly along the core of the
fiber. The core is generally made of glass. The core is described as having a radius of (a) and an index of refraction n 1. The core is surrounded by a layer of
material called the cladding. Even though light will propagate along the fiber core without the layer of cladding material, the cladding does perform some
necessary functions.

The cladding layer is made of a dielectric material with an index of refraction n 2. The index of refraction of the cladding material is less than that of the core
material. The cladding is generally made of glass or plastic. The cladding performs the following functions:

Reduces loss of light from the core into the surrounding air

Reduces scattering loss at the surface of the core

Protects the fiber from absorbing surface contaminants

Adds mechanical strength

For extra protection, the cladding is enclosed in an additional layer called the coating orbuffer. The coating or buffer is a layer of material used to protect an
optical fiber from physical damage. The material used for a buffer is a type of plastic.
The buffer is elastic in nature and prevents abrasions. The buffer also prevents the optical fiber from scattering losses caused by microbends. Microbends
occur when an optical fiber is placed on a rough and distorted surface.
PROPAGATION OF LIGHT ALONG A FIBER
The concept of light propagation, the transmission of light along an optical fiber, can be described by two theories. According to the first theory, light is
described as a simple ray. This theory is the ray theory, or geometrical optics, approach. The advantage of the ray approach is that you get a clearer picture of
the propagation of light along a fiber. The ray theory is used to approximate the light acceptance and guiding properties of optical fibers. According to the

second theory, light is described as an electromagnetic wave. This theory is the mode theory, or wave representation, approach. The mode theory describes the
behavior of light within an optical fiber. The mode theory is useful in describing the optical fiber properties of absorption, attenuation, and dispersion.
Ans2. Attenuation
Attenuation in an optical fiber is caused by absorption, scattering, and bending losses. Attenuation is the loss of optical power as light travels along the fiber.
Signal attenuation is defined as the ratio of optical input power (P i) to the optical output power (Po). Optical input power is the power injected into the fiber
from an optical source. Optical output power is the power received at the fiber end or optical detector. The following equation defines signal attenuation as a
unit of length:

Signal attenuation is a log relationship. Length (L) is expressed in kilometers. Therefore, the unit of attenuation is decibels/kilometer (dB/km). As previously
stated, attenuation is caused by absorption, scattering, and bending losses. Each mechanism of loss is influenced by fiber-material properties and fiber
structure. However, loss is also present at fiber connections.
Ans.3. Lasers are monochromatic (single color wavelength), collimated (non-divergent) and coherent (wavelengths in- phase) in contrast, LED's are neither
coherent nor collimated and generate a broader band of wavelengths (multiple). In addition, a significant difference between the two is the power output. The
peak power output of lasers is measured in watts, while that of LED's, is measured in milliwatts. Also, LED's usually have a 50% duty cycle, meaning that
they are "on" 50% of the time and "off" 50% of the time regardless of what frequency (pulses per second) setting is used.
There are many light emitting products on the market today, claiming to be lasers that do not meet scientifically defined
attributes for being a true laser. For example, products that use Light Emitting Diodes or LEDs as they are more commonly
known, do in fact produce light, however the light is not intense, producing very little energy and is non-coherent, similar to
light produced by common household light bulbs. Non-coherent or non-culminated light is the result of photons moving in
random directions at random times, generating random frequencies. The most common use of LEDs is in electronic
equipment, such as cell phones and VCRs, to inform the users that the item is ON. LEDs are cheap and easy to reproduce

(Pontinen 1992). Obviously, these devices are NOT lasers. This misconception is in large part a by-product of marketing.
Some sales professional use the word "laser" in order to describe a process such as in "laser pointers" which refers more to
mankind's collective imagination than scientific comprehension.
LED Diode vs LASER Diode
LED Diode

Full form of LED- light emitting diode.

LED's are small in size, longer life, reliable and require little power.

Here generation photon by spontaneous emittion.

LED's produce a divergent and incohrent light beam.

Types of LED 1> surface emitter and 2> Edge emitter.

Their response is fast.

A wide range of wavelengths is available.

The cost of LED would be less.

An intensity of generating light is less.

Coupling efficiency of LED with fiber is less.

LED's use with the multimode fibers.

Bandwidth of led is moderate.

In led have require no extra circuit because of its simple circuit.

Here require drive current is 50 to 100mA.


LASER Diode

Full form of LASER - light amplification by stimulated emmition of radiation.

Laser's are bigger in size, longer life, less reliable and require more power then LED.

Here generating photon by stimulated emission.

Laser produce q monochromatic and coherent light beam.

Types of Laser (a) semiconductor laser and (b) Gas laser.

Their response is faster than LED.

A small range of wavelength is available.

The cost of Laser would be higher.

Coupling efficiency of Laser with fiber is higher.

Laser use with both single mode and multi mode fibers.

-Bandwidth of laser is higher.

In laser have require extra circuit for isolation of temperature reaction.

Here require drive current is Therashold current 5 to 40mA.

Ans.4.
In a typical fiber optic network, the data signal is transmitted using single light pulse at either 1310 nm or 1550 nm wavelengths.
Historically, the way to increase the capacity of a single fiber is to increase the bit rate of the signal (1 Mbps to 10 Mbps to 100 Mbps). Throughout the last
30 years, optical systems have increased their capacity regularly, allowing for bandwidth upgrades that outpaced the growth in bandwidth demands.
Primarily driven by Ethernet and packet-based services, the need for bandwidth has exploded. Even mid-sized network operators are demanding multiple 10
Gbps pipes to accommodate large increases for growing and diverse applications such as surveillance, ITV, and data-center connections. This growth requires
transport that is flexible and scalable.

Wavelength division multiplexing (WDM) is now a cost-effective, flexible and scalable technology for increasing capacity of a fiber network. WDM
architecture is based a simple concept instead of transmitting a single signal on a single wavelength, transmit multiple signals, each with a different
wavelength. Each remains a separate data signal, at any bit rate with any protocol, unaffected by other signal on the fiber.

Wave Division Multiplexing

CWDM and DWDM


There are two types of WDM: Coarse and Dense Wavelength Division Multiplexing (CWDM and DWDM).
CWDM uses a wide spectrum and accommodates eight channels. This wide spacing of channels allows for the use of moderately priced optics, but limits
capacity. CWDM is typically used for lower-cost, lower-capacity, shorter-distance applications where cost is the paramount decision criteria.

DWDM systems pack 16 or more channels into a narrow spectrum window very near the 1550 nm local attenuation minimum. Decreasing channel spacing
requires the use of more precise and costly optics, but allows for significantly more scalability. Typical DWDM systems provide 1-44 channels of capacity,
with some new systems, offering up to 80-160 channels. DWDM is typically used where high capacity is needed over a limited fiber resource or where it is
cost prohibitive to deploy more fiber.
ROADM and FOADM
As with most transport systems, there are requirements to add and drop traffic along ring and tapered networks. WDM systems support two types of add/drop
Fixed and Reconfigurable Optical Add/Drop Multiplexers (FOADM and ROADM).
FOADMs are based on simple static fibers that permit add/drop of predefined wavelengths. These systems are fully integrated and manageable and provide a
fine balance of features and cost.
ROADMs add the ability to remotely switch traffic from a WDM system at the wavelength layer. While more expensive than FOADMs, ROADMs are used in
application where traffic patterns are not fully known or change frequently.
The key features and benefits of WDM include:

Protocol and Bit Rate Agnostic wavelengths can accept virtually any services
Fiber Capacity Expansion WDM adds up to 160X bandwidth to a single fiber
Hi Cap/Long Haul and Lo Cap/Short Haul Applications CWDM and DWDM provide price performance for virtually any network
Remotely Provisionable ROADMs provide the flexibility to change with changing network requirements

WDM Network

Ans.5. An optical amplifier is a device that amplifies an optical signal directly, without the need to first convert it to an electrical signal. Optical amplifiers
are important in optical communication and laser physics. With the demand for longer transmission lengths, optical amplifiers have become an essential
component in long-haul fiber optic systems. Semiconductor optical amplifiers (SOAs), erbium doped fiber amplifiers (EDFAs), and Raman optical
amplifiers lessen the effects of dispersion and attenuation allowing improved performance of long-haul optical systems.
Semiconductor Optical Amplifiers
Semiconductor optical amplifiers (SOAs) are essentially laser diodes, without end mirrors, which have fiber attached to both ends. They amplify any optical
signal that comes from either fiber and transmit an amplified version of the signal out of the second fiber. SOAs are typically constructed in a small package,
and they work for 1310 nm and 1550 nm systems. In addition, they transmit bidirectionally, making the reduced size of the device an advantage
over regenerators of EDFAs. However, the drawbacks to SOAs include high-coupling loss, polarization dependence, and a higher noise figure. Figure 1
illustrates the basics of a Semiconductor optical amplifier.
Figure 1 - Semiconductor Optical Amplifier

Modern optical networks utilize SOAs in the follow ways: Power Boosters: Many tunable laser designs output low optical power levels and must be
immediately followed by an optical amplifier. ( A power booster can use either an SOA or EDFA.) In-Line Amplifier: Allows signals to be amplified within
the signal path. Wavelength Conversion: Involves changing the wavelength of an optical signal. Receiver Preamplifier: SOAs can be placed in front
of detectors to enhance sensitivity.
EDFAs
The explosion of dense wavelength-division multiplexing (DWDM) applications make these optical amplifiers an essential fiber optic system building block.
EDFAs allow information to be transmitted over longer distances without the need for conventional repeaters. The fiber is doped with erbium, a rare earth

element, that has the appropriate energy levels in their atomic structures for amplifying light. EDFAs are designed to amplify light at 1550 nm. The device
utilizes a 980 nm or 1480nm pump laser to inject energy into the doped fiber. When a weak signal at 1310 nm or 1550 nm enters the fiber, the light stimulates
the rare earth atoms to release their stored energy as additional 1550 nm or 1310 nm light. This process continues as the signal passes down the fiber, growing
stronger and stronger as it goes. Figure 2 shows a fully featured, dual pump EDFA that includes all of the common components of a modern EDFA.
Figure 2 - Block Diagram of an EDFA

The input coupler, Coupler #1, allows the microcontroller to monitor the input light via detector #1. The input isolator, isolator #1 is almost always present.
WDM #1 is always present, and provides a means of injecting the 980 nm pump wavelength into the length of erbium-doped fiber. WDM #1 also allows the
optical input signal to be coupled into the erbium-doped fiber with minimal optical loss. The erbium-doped optical fiber is usually tens of meters long. The
980 nm energy pumps the erbium atom into a slowly decaying, excited state. When energy in the 1550 nm band travels through the fiber it causes stimulated
emission of radiation, much like in a laser, allowing the 1550 nm signal to gain strength. The erbium fiber has relatively high optical loss, so its length is
optimized to provide maximum power output in the desired 1550 nm band. WDM #2 is present only in dual pumped EDFAs. It couples additional 980 nm
energy from Pump Laser #2 into the other end of the erbium-doped fiber, increasing gain and output power. Isolator #3 is almost always present. Coupler #2
is optional and may have only one of the two ports shown or may be omitted altogether. The tap that goes to Detector #3 is used to monitor the optical output
power. The tap that goes to Detector #2 is used to monitor reflections back into the EDFA. This feature can be used to detect if the connector on the optical
output has been disconnected. This increases the backreflected signal, and the microcontrolled can set to disable the pump lasers in this event, providing a
measure of safety for technicians working with EDFAs. Figure 3 shows a two-stage EDFA with mid-stage access. In this case, two single-stage EDFAs are
packaged together. The output of the first stage EDFA and the input of the second stage EDFA are brought out the user. Mid-stage access is important in high

performance fiber optic systems. To reduce the overall dispersion of the system, dispersion compensating fiber (DCF) can be used periodically. However,
problems can arise from using the DCF, mostly the insertion loss reaching 10 dB. Placing the DCF at the mid-stage access point of the two-stage EDFA
reduces detrimental effects on the system, and allows the users noticeable gain.
Figure 3 - Two-stage EDFA with Mid-stage Access

The optical input first passes through optical Isolator #1. Next the light passes through WDM #1, which provides a means of injecting the 980 nm pump
wavelength into the first length of erbium-doped fiber. WDM #1 also allows the optical input signal to be coupled into the erbium-doped fiber with minimal
optical loss. The erbium-doped optical fiber is usually tens of meters long. Like the fully feature, dual pumped EDFA, the 980 nm energy pumps the erbium
atoms into an excited state that decays slowly. When light in the 1550 nm band travels through the erbium-doped fiber it causes stimulated emission of
radiation. As the optical signal gains strength, output of the erbium-doped fiber then goes into the optical isolator #2, the output of which is available to the
user. Typically, a dispersion compensating device will be connected at the mid-stage access point. The light then travels through isolator #3 and WDM #2,
which couples additional 980 nm energy from a second pump laser into the other end of a second length of erbium-doped fiber, increasing gain and output
power. Finally, the light travels through isolator #4. Photons amplify the signal avoiding almost all active components, a benefit of EDFAs. Since the output
power of an EDFA can be large, any given system design can require fewer amplifiers. Yet another benefit of EDFAs is the data rate independence means that
system upgrades only require changing the launch/receive terminals. The most basic EDFA design amplifies light over a narrow, 12 nm, band. Adding gain

equalization filters can increase the band to more than 25 nm. Other exotic doped fibers increase the amplification band to 40 nm. Because EDFAs greatly
enhance system performance, they find use in long-haul, high data rate fiber optic communication systems and CATV delivery systems. Long-haul systems
need amplifiers because of the lengths of fiber used. CATV applications often need to split a signal to several fibers, and EDFAs boost the signal before and
after the fiber splits. There are four major applications that generally require optical fiber amplifiers: power amplifier/booster, in-line amplifier, preamplifier
or loss compensation for optical networks. Below are detailed description of each application. Power Amplifier/Booster Figure 4 illustrates the first three
application for optical amplifiers. Power amplifiers (also referred to as booster amplifiers) are placed directly after the optical transmitter. This application
requires the EDFA to take a large signal input and provide the maximum output level. Small signal response is not as important because the direct transmitter
output is usually -10 dBm or higher. The noise added by the amplifier at this point is also not as critical because the incoming signal has a large signal-tonoise ratio (SNR).
Figure 4 - Three Applications for an EDFA

In-Line Amplifiers In-line amplifiers or in-line repeaters, modify a small input signal and boost it for retransmission down the fiber. Controlling the small
signal performance and noise added by the EDFA reduces the risk of limiting a system's length due to the noise produced by the amplifying components.
Preamplifiers Past receiver sensitivity of -30 dBm at 622 Mb/s was acceptable; however, presently, the demands require sensitivity of -40 dBm or -45 dBm.
This performance can be achieved by placing an optical amplifier prior to the receiver. Boosting the signal at this point presents a much larger signal into the
receiver, thus easing the demands of the receiver design. This application requires careful attention to the noise added by the EDFA; the noise added by the
amplifier must be minimal to maximize the received SNR. Compensating for Loss in Optical Networks Inserting an EDFA before an 8 x 1 optical splitter
increases the power to almost +19 dBm allowing each of the eight output legs to provide +9 dBm, making the output almost equal to the original transmitter
power. The optical splitter alone has a nominal optical insertion loss of 10 dB. The transmitter has an optical output of +10 dBm, meaning that the optical
splitter outputs without an EDFA would be 0 dBm. This output power would be acceptable for most digital applications; however, in analog CATV
applications this is the minimal acceptable received power. Therefore, inserting the EDFA before the optical splitter greatly increases the output power.

Figure 5 - Loss Compensation in Optical Networks

Wideband EDFAs Optical communication systems carrying 100 or more optical wavelengths require and increase in the bandwidth of the optical amplifier to
nearly 80 nm. Normally employing a hybrid optical amplifier, consisting of two separate optical amplifiers, allows for separate amplification, one for the
lower 40 nm band and the second for the upper 40 nm band. Figure 6 exemplifies the optical gain spectrum of a hybrid optical amplifier. The solid lines
illustrate the response of two individual amplifier sections. The dotted line, which has been increased by 1 dB for clarity, shows the response of the combined
hybrid amplifier.
Figure 6 - Optical Gain Spectrum of a Hybrid Optical Amplifier

Raman Optical Amplifiers

Raman optical amplifiers differ in principle from EDFAs or conventional lasers in that they utilize stimulated Raman scattering (SRS) to create optical gain.
Initially, SRS was considered too detrimental to high channel count DWDM systems. Figure 7 shows the typical transmit spectrum of a six channel DWDM
system in the 1550 nm window. Notice that all six wavelengths have approximately the same amplitude.
Figure 7 - DWDM Transmit Spectrum with Six Wavelengths

By applying SRS the wavelengths, it is obvious that the noise background has increased, making the amplitudes of the six wavelengths different. The lower
wavelengths have a smaller amplitude than the upper wavelengths. The SRS effectively robbed energy from the lower wavelength and fed that energy to the
upper wavelength.

Figure 8 - Received Spectrum After SRS is on a Long Fiber

A Raman optical amplifier is little more that a high-power pump laser, and a WDM or directional coupler. The optical amplification occurs in the transmission
fiber itself, distributed along the transmission path. Optical signals are amplified up to 10 dB in the network optical fiber. The Raman optical amplifiers have a
wide gain bandwidth (up to 10 nm). They can use any installed transmission optical fiber. Consequently, they reduce the effective span loss to improve noise
performance by boosting the optical signal in transit. They can be combined with EDFAs to expand optical gain flattened bandwidth. Figure 9 shows the
topology of a typical Raman optical amplifier. The pump laser and circulator comprise the two key elements of the Raman optical amplifier. The pump laser,
in this case, has a wavelength of 1535 nm. The circulator provides a convenient means of injecting light backwards in to the transmission path with minimal
optical loss.

Figure 9 - Typical Raman Amplifier Configuration

Figure 10 illustrates the optical spectrum of a forward-pumped Raman optical amplifier. The pump laser is injected at the transmit end rather than the receive
end as shown in Figure 9. The pump laser has a wavelength of 1535 nm; the amplitude is much larger than the data signals.
Figure 10 - Example of Raman Amplifier -- Transmitted Spectrum

As before, applying SRS makes the amplitude of the six data signals much stronger. The energy from the 1535 nm pump laser is redistributed to the six data

signals.
Figure 11 - Example of Raman Amplifier -- Received Spectrum

Assignment B
Ans.1.
Synchronous Optic Network (SONET) and Synchronous Digital Hierarchy (SDH) are standards used in fiber optic networks that power large
telephone and Internet networks. SONET networks are deployed in North America; SDH networks are deployed everywhere else. Although the SONET
standards were developed before SDH, it is considered a variation of SDH because of SDH's greater worldwide market penetration.The data communications
industry uses the concept of backbone to refer to a large network capable of carrying heavy loads of traffic. SONET and SDH fiber optic networks,
although expensive, are ideal backbone networks, offering high speeds and reliability. Synchronous Optical Networking (SONET) and Synchronous Digital
Hierarchy (SDH) are standardized protocols that transfer multiple digital bit streams synchronously overoptical fiber using lasers or highly coherent light
from light-emitting diodes (LEDs). At low transmission rates data can also be transferred via an electrical interface.
SONET and SDH, which are essentially the same, were originally designed to transport circuit mode communications (e.g., Digital Signal1, Digital Signal3)
from a variety of different sources, but they were primarily designed to support real-time, uncompressed, circuit-switched voice encoded in Pluse-Code
Modulation format. The primary difficulty in doing this prior to SONET/SDH was that the synchronization sources of these various circuits were different.
This meant that each circuit was actually operating at a slightly different rate and with different phase. SONET/SDH allowed for the simultaneous transport of
many different circuits of differing origin within a single framing protocol. SONET/SDH is not a communications protocol in itself, but a transport protocol.

Due to SONET/SDH's essential protocol neutrality and transport-oriented features, SONET/SDH was the obvious choice for transporting the fixed
length Asynchronous Transfer Mode (ATM) frames also known as cells. It quickly evolved mapping structures and concatenated payload containers to
transport ATM connections. In other words, for ATM (and eventually other protocols such as Ethernet), the internal complex structure previously used to
transport circuit-oriented connections was removed and replaced with a large and concatenated frame (such as STS-3c) into which ATM cells, IP packets, or
Ethernet frames are placed.
In other words we can say that, Both SONET and SDH are based on a structure that has a basic frame format and speed. The frame format used by SONET is
the Synchronous Transport Signal (STS), with STS-1 as the base-level signal at 51.84 Mbps. An STS-1 frame can be carried in an OC-1 signal. The frame
format used by SDH is the Synchronous Transport Module (STM), with STM-1 as the base-level signal at 155.52Mbps. An STM-1 frame can be carried in an
OC-3 signal. Both SONET and SDH have a hierarchy of signaling speeds. Multiple lower-level signals can be multiplexed to form higher-level signals. For
example, three STS-1 signals can be multiplexed together to form an STS-3 signal, and four STM-1 signals multiplexed together to form an STM-4 signal.
SONET and SDH are technically comparable standards. The term SONET is often used to refer to either.
Ans.2. Intersymbol Interference
In a digital transmission system, distortion of the received signal, manifested in the temporal spreading and consequent overlap of individual pulses to the
degree that the receiver cannot reliably distinguish between changes of state, i.e., between individual signal elements. At a certain threshold, intersymbol
interference will compromise the integrity of the received data. Intersymbol interference may be measured by eye patterns.
In telecommunication, Intersymbol interference (ISI) is a form of distortion of a signal in which one symbol interferes with subsequent symbols. This is an
unwanted phenomenon as the previous symbols have similar effect as noise, thus making the communication less reliable. ISI is usually caused by multipath
propagation or the inherent non-linear frequency response of a channel causing successive symbols to "blur" together. The presence of ISI in the system
introduces errors in the decision device at the receiver output. Therefore, in the design of the transmitting and receiving filters, the objective is to minimize the
effects of ISI, and thereby deliver the digital data to its destination with the smallest error rate possible. Ways to fight intersymbol interference include
adaptive equalization and error correcting codes.
Crosstalk in Optical Fibers
The crosstalk in fiber optics, the undesired optical power that is transferred from, i.e., that leaks from, one optical fiber to another.The crosstalk is often a
measure of the optical power picked up by an optical fiber from an adjacent energized fiber. The crosstalk, (XT), is always negative. The negative sign is

commonly ignored. The crosstalk may be given simply in dB (decibels), such as 90dB. The crosstalk is undesired capacitive, inductive or conductive
coupling from one electrical circuit, part of a circuit or channel to another.
Ans.3. Fiber

optic joints or terminations are made two ways: 1) splices which create a permanent joint between the

two fibers or 2) connectors that mate two fibers to create a temporary joint and/or connect the fiber to a piece of
network gear.
Splices are considered permanent joints and are used for joining most outside plant cables. Fusion splicing is most
widely used as it provides for the lowest loss and least reflectance, as well as providing the most reliable joint.
Virtually all singlemode splices are fusion. Mechanical splicing is used for temporary restoration and for most
multimode splicing.
Connectors are used for terminations, that is the ends of the fibers where they connect to equipment or to patch
panels where fiber routing can be changed by patching different fibers together. Different connectors and termination
procedures are used for multimode and singlemode fibers. Multimode fibers are relatively easy to terminate, so field
termination is generally done by installing connectors directly on tight buffered fibers using the procedures outlined
below. Most field singlemode terminations are made by splicing a factory-made pigtail onto the installed cable rather
than terminating the fiber directly as is commonly done with multimode fiber. Singlemode terminations require
extreme care in assembly, especially polishing, to get good performance (low loss and reflectance), so they are
usually done in a clean manufacturing facility using heat-cured epoxy and machine polishing.

Assignment c

1. The 3-D shape of an Optical Fiber is


a. A cylinder rod
b. Rectangular
c. Square
d. Circle
Ans: a

2. The waves that travels through the fiber is


a. Electrical Wanes
b. Radio Waves
c. Light Waves
d. None of the above
Ans: C
3. Optical fiber are made up of
a. Sand & Glass

b. Conductor
c. Glass and Plastic
d. None of the Above
Ans: C

4. Bare fibers are having protection Sheath


a. Yes
b. No
c. Not sure
d. There is no such term
Ans: B
5. Can fibers be bent at right angles?
a. Yes
b. No
c. Not sure
d. There is no such term
Ans: B
6. The principle on which the optical fiber works is:

a. Total Internal Reflection


b. Critical Angle of Incidence
c. Angle of Inciddence
d. None of the Above
Ans: A
7. Transmission media are usually categorized as _______.
A) fixed or unfixed
B) guided or unguided
C) determinate or indeterminate
D) metallic or nonmetallic
8.
Transmission media lie below the _______ layer.
A) physical
B) network
C) transport
D) application
9. _______ cable consists of an inner copper core and a second conducting outer
sheath.

A) Twisted-pair
B) Coaxial
C) Fiber-optic
D) Shielded twisted-pair

10. 4. In fiber optics, the signal is _______ waves.


A) light
B) radio
C) infrared
D) very low-frequency
11. Which of the following primarily uses guided media?
A) cellular telephone system
B) local telephone system
C) satellite communications
D) radio broadcasting

12. Which of the following is not a guided medium?


A) twisted-pair cable

B) coaxial cable
C) fiber-optic cable
D) atmosphere
13. What is the major factor that makes coaxial cable less susceptible to noise than
twisted-pair cable?
A) inner conductor
B) diameter of cable
C) outer conductor
D) insulating material

14. In an optical fiber, the inner core is _______ the cladding.


A) denser than
B) less dense than
C) the same density as
D) another name for

15. The inner core of an optical fiber is _______ in composition.


A) glass or plastic

B) copper
C) bimetallic
D) liquid
16. When a beam of light travels through media of two different densities, if the angle of
incidence is greater than the critical angle, _______ occurs.
A) reflection
B) refraction
C) incidence
D) criticism

17. When the angle of incidence is _______ the critical angle, the light beam bends along
the interface.
A) more than
B) less than
C) equal to
D) none of the above

18. Signals with a frequency below 2 MHz use _______ propagation.

A) ground
B) sky
C) line-of-sight
D) none of the above

19.
________ cable consists of two insulated copper wires twisted together.
A) Coaxial
B) Fiber-optic
C) Twisted-pair
D) none of the above
20. _______ cable is used for voice and data communications.
A) Coaxial
B) Fiber-optic
C) Twisted-pair
D) none of the above

21. _____ cable can carry signals of higher frequency ranges than _____ cable.
A) Twisted-pair; fiber-optic
B) Coaxial; fiber-optic
C) Coaxial; twisted-pair
D) none of the above

22. ______ cables are composed of a glass or plastic inner core surrounded by cladding,
all encased in an outside jacket.
A) Coaxial
B) Fiber-optic
C) Twisted-pair
D) none of the above

23. ______ cables carry data signals in the form of light.


A) Coaxial
B) Fiber-optic
C) Twisted-pair

D) none of the above.


24. Transmission media are usually categorized as
a. Fixed or unfixed
b, Guided or unguided
c. Determinate or indeterminate
d. Metallic or nonmetallic
25. Transmission media are closest to the ________ layer.
a. Physical
b. Network
c. Transport
d. Application
26. Category 1 UTP cable is most often used in _______ networks.
a. Fast Ethernet
b. Traditional Ethernet
c. Infrared
d. Telephone
27. BNC connectors are used by ________ cables.
a. UTP

b. STP
c. Coaxial
d. Fiber-optic
28. _______ cable consists of an inner copper core and a second conducting outer
sheath.
a. Twisted-pair
b Coaxial
c. Fiber-optic
d. Shielded twisted-pair Dr. Gihan NAGUIB 2
29. In fiber optics, the signal source is ______waves.
a. Light
b. Radio
c. Infrared
d. Very low-frequency

30. Smoke signals are an example of communication through_____


a. A guided medium
b. An unguided medium

c. A refractive medium
d. A small or large medium

31.Which of the following primarily uses guided media?


a. Cellular telephone system
b. Local telephone system
c. Satellite communications
d. Radio broadcasting

32. Which of the following is not a guided medium?


a. Twisted-pair cable
b. Coaxial cable
c. Fiber-optic cable
d. Atmosphere
33.. In an environment with many high-voltage devices, the best transmission medium
would be _________
a. Twisted-pair cable
b. Coaxial cable

c. Optical fiber
d. The atmosphere

34. . What is the major factor that makes coaxial cable less susceptible to noise than
twisted-pair cable?
a. Inner conductor
b. Diameter of cable
c. Outer conductor
d. Insulating material

35. The RG number gives us information about


a. Twisted pairs
b. Coaxial cables
c. Optical fibers
d. All the above

36. In an optical fiber, the inner core is ___________ the cladding.


a. Denser than

b. Less dense than


c. The same density as
d. Another name for

37. The inner core of an optical fiber is in composition.


a. Glass or plastic
b. Copper
c. Bimetallic
d. Liquid

39. Optical fibers, unlike wire media, are highly resistant to


a. High-frequency transmission
b. Low-frequency transmission
c. Electromagnetic interference
d. Refraction

40. When the angle of incidence is __________ the critical angle, the light beam
bends along the interface.

a. More than
b. Less than
c. Equal to
d. None of the above

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