Term
What are the two primary purposes of modulating a signal? |
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Definition
1. Ease of radiation 2. Channel Allocation |
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Term
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Definition
Allows us to transmit low frequency signals at higher frequencies. |
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Term
What must we do first to radiate a signal over long distances? |
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Definition
First change them to an analog format by using a modulation technique |
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Term
name the part of the AM carrier that varies according to the modulating signal. |
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Definition
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Term
What frequencies are present at the output of an AM modulator |
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Definition
Carrier Frequency Carrier plus the Modulating frequency Carrier minus the modulating frequency |
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Term
What would be the frequencies at the output of the modulator when you modulate a 500 kHz carrier with a 2 kHz tone? |
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Definition
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Term
In conventional AM (DSBEC), what is the relation between the bandwidth required to transmit the signal and the bandwidth of the modulating signal? |
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Definition
The bandwidth required is twice the modulating signal |
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Term
What part of the bandwidth of a DSBEC signal carries the information signals? |
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Definition
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Term
State the main disadvantage of DSBEC AM |
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Definition
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Term
What determines the amount of deviation of a FM carrier? |
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Definition
The amplitude of the modulating signal |
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Term
how does the rate of deviation relate to the frequency of the modulating signal? |
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Definition
They are directly proportional |
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Term
Who determines the maximum amount of deviation in FM? |
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Definition
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Term
How do you determine the modulation index in FM? |
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Definition
By dividing the amount of frequency deviation by the frequency of the modulating signal. |
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Term
What is a significant sideband? |
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Definition
A sideband that contains at least 1 % of the total transmitted power. |
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Term
WHere do FM sidebands get their power? |
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Definition
From the unmodulated carrier |
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Term
What is the relationship between modulation index and sideband power? |
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Definition
higher modulation index means more power in the sidebands. |
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Term
In PM, what effect does the change in carrier frequency have? |
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Definition
NONE, the frequency change in PM is incidental |
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Term
Describe the effect the positive and negative alterations of a modulating signal have onthe phase of the carrier in the PM. |
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Definition
during the positive alternation of the modulating signal, the phase of the carrier lags behind the unmodulated carrier. During the negative alternation it leads the unmodulated carrier. |
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Term
When is the carrier at its REST frequency in PM? |
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Definition
During the constant amplitude of the modulating frequency |
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Term
What part of the modulating signal controls the amount of phase shift in PM? |
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Definition
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Term
What part of the modulating signal controls the rate of phase shift? |
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Definition
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Term
How can you increase efficiency in digital modulation? |
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Definition
By using multilevel encoding |
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Term
Describe the QPSK process. |
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Definition
The input NRZ signal is split into two directions ( I-rail and Q-rail), each at half the data rate. The Q-rail signal is phase shifted 90 degrees and both are modulated in bi-phase modulators. The signal are recombined to for the QPSK signal |
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Term
What are the two reasons for using higher levels PSK? |
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Definition
To increase capacity or decrease modulation rate |
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Term
How many bits are grouped in 8 PSK? |
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Definition
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Term
How many bits are grouped in 16 PSK? |
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Definition
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Term
What is the main disadvantage of higher level PSK? |
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Definition
You need a higher S/N ratio |
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Term
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Definition
The process of converting analog signals to digital signals. |
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Term
Name the four steps of PCM ( Pulse Code Modulation) |
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Definition
Band limiting sampling quantizing encoding |
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Term
State the main purpose of the band-limiting filter. |
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Definition
It ensures the input to the sampler never exceeds a maximum frequency |
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Term
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Definition
Converting a continuous time signal into a discrete time signal. |
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Term
What part of the pulse train is varied using PAM, PWM, and PPM? |
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Definition
PAM=Amplitude PWM= Width or duration PPM=Position |
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Term
What is the Nyquist sampling rate? |
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Definition
Sampling the input at twice its highest frequency |
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Term
Which step of PCM assigns discrete amplitude values to the sampled amplitude values? |
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Definition
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Term
Name 2 methods of quantization. |
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Definition
Uniform quantizing Non-Uniform Quantizing |
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Term
Which method assigns amplitude values based on an equal amplitude range? |
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Definition
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Term
WIth ATM, what is the length of each transmission unit? |
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Definition
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Term
What part of an ATM transmission tells the receiving device that a character is coming and that the character has been sent? |
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Definition
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Term
How does the receiving device determine whether it has received a correct character? |
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Definition
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Term
What is an advantage of synchronous transmission over asynchronous transmission? |
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Definition
To reduce the overall cost of data transmission. |
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Term
How does synchronous transmission differ from asynchronous transmission? |
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Definition
Synchronous transmission blocks many characters together for transmission. |
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Term
What does VRC check each incoming character for? |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
There is an even number of 1's in the bit pattern for each character |
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Term
What is the difference between VRC and LRC? |
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Definition
VRC checks each character for odd parity ; LRC check an entire horizontal line within a block for odd or even parity |
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Term
What transmitted character does the receiver use to determine if a transmission was error free? |
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Definition
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Term
When using the checksum method of error detection, what binary number is used to divide the sum of all characters in order to derive the checksum? |
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Definition
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Term
How does CRC method of error detection determine the dividend when computing the BCC? |
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Definition
CRC treats the binary ones and zeros in the frame address, control, and information fields as one long binary number. |
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Term
How effective is CRC at detecting errors in most applications? |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
The receiver automatically sends a retransmittal request to the sender if it finds an error in a received frame. |
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Term
What is the most common method of error correction? |
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Definition
ARQ ( Automatic retransmit on Request) |
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Term
On what type of circuits is forward error control most useful? |
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Definition
On circuits with extremely high error rates or on 1-way broadcast circuits. |
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Term
Using forward error control, at which end of the transmission link are errors corrected? |
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Definition
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Term
Using forward error control, what is the transmitter's function in error correction? |
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Definition
To transmit multiple copies of the same message to the distant end. |
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Term
Using forward error control, what is the receiver's function in error correction? |
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Definition
To compare all copies of transmitted message, then reconstruct the message using the good portions of the message copies received. |
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Term
How do we define fiber optics (FO)? |
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Definition
A technology in which light is transmitted along the inside of a thin flexible glass or plastic fiber.l |
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Term
What is the most common use of Fiber Optics? |
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Definition
Transmission link connecting two electronic devices or circuits |
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Term
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Definition
The information carrier capacity of a carrier wave. |
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Term
Compare attenuation in Fiber optics to attenuation in metallic cables. |
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Definition
Optical fibers have less attentuation (power loss) than metallic cables. |
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Term
how are fiber optic cables affected by electromagnetic interference? |
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Definition
Fiber optics are immune to this kind of interference |
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Term
Why are communications over fiber optic cables highly secure? |
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Definition
It is virtually impossible to tap a fiber optic cable unnoticed because the light carrying part of the core is so affected by the tap that it is easily detected. Since fiber does not radiate energy, other eavesdropping techniques are useless |
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Term
Why do we use the metric system to measure fiber optics? |
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Definition
because fiber optic dimensions, weights and frequencies are generally very small or very large |
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Term
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Definition
One Thousandth of a meter |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
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Term
Name two safety precautions to observe when working with fiber optics. |
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Definition
DO NOT look into a laser beam. Always wear goggles to protect against flying fragments of silica. |
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Term
What are the components of a typical fiber optic cable? |
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Definition
Core, Cladding, and protective coating |
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Term
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Definition
the optical transmision path that carries the lightwaves to the receiving end. It may be glass or plastic. |
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Term
The fiber cladding surrounds the core. What is its purpose and what material is it made of? |
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Definition
The cladding surrounds the core and provides the reflective surface that allowes light to propagate along the core to the distant end. It is also a solid section of transparent glass or plastic, but with much lower density than the core. |
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Term
Name the three MAJOR types of buffering designs. |
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Definition
1. Tight buffer tube 2. Loose Tube 3. Ribbon |
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Term
How is a loose tube buffer formed? |
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Definition
Optical Fibers are usually coated with a thin layer of acrelate and then several fibers are placed in a hard plastic tube with an inside diameter several times larger than the diameter of the fiber. |
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Term
What characteristic of the carrier wave does the energy possessed by the photon determine? |
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Definition
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Term
Photon particles are a part of what spectrum? |
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Definition
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Term
What is the frequency range of infrared light? |
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Definition
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Term
Describe refractive index. |
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Definition
It's the ratio of the speed of light in a vacuum to its speed in a given medium. |
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Term
Light bends as it passes through materials of different density. What do we call this phenomenom? |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
it is bouncing back of light from an object |
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Term
What are four basic facts that we must consider in understanding lightwave propagation? |
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Definition
1. The normal 2. The angle of incidence 3.The angle of refraction 4. The angle of reflection |
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Term
What happens to light when it passes from a higher index material to a lower one? |
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Definition
It's bent away from the normal. |
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Term
Describe the critical angle. |
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Definition
The angle of incidence that causes the angle of refraction to equal 90 degrees |
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Term
What does Snell's law State? |
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Definition
If a ray of light enters a junction of two media of different refractive indices beyond the critical angle, the light is totally internally reflected. |
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Term
Describe numerical aperature |
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Definition
It's a fiber's inherent light-gathering capability |
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Term
How is light affected in a cable that has a large numerical aperature? |
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Definition
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Term
How does a fiber reach equilibrium-mode distribution? |
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Definition
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Term
How do we express the amount of power in a fiber optic link? |
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Definition
In microwatts or milliwatts |
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Term
To what can we attribute fiber-to-fiber connection power losses? |
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Definition
Acceptance cone/ejection cone mismatches, fiber core diameter mismatches, connector insertion loss, and intrinsic fiber loss. |
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Term
What unit of measurement do we use to express fiber optic attenuation? |
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Definition
Decibals per kilometer (dB/km) |
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Term
What are the two MAIN causes of attenuation in optical fibers? |
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Definition
1. Absorption 2. Rayleigh Scattering |
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Term
What is spectral attenuation? |
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Definition
It is related to light wavelengths and requires careful balancing of light sources and fibers. |
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Term
How can we reduce Fresnel losses in a fiber? |
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Definition
By using index matching fluids |
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Term
What does nuclear radiation cause in fiber optic cables? |
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Definition
Increased attenuation caused by absorption and scattering. |
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Term
What happens when a fiber's bending radius is exceeded? |
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Definition
It experiences macrobends or microbends |
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Term
What is dispersion in a fiber optic cable? |
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Definition
The spreading out of the light in the fiber |
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Term
How does dispersion affect the bandwidth? |
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Definition
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Term
What causes each of the two main types of dispersion? |
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Definition
1. Modal dispersion is caused by different paths of light in various modes 2. material dispersion is caused from different velocities of different wavelengths |
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Term
How do we measure dispersion? |
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Definition
In nanoseconds per kilometer (ns/Km) |
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Term
Optical fibers are normally composed of what materials? |
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Definition
Entirely of glass or silica, plastic-clad silica, or all plastic |
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Term
How are optical fibers generally classified? |
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Definition
By the number of modes and the core's refractive index profile. |
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Term
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Definition
A mathematical and physical concept describing the propagation of electromagnetic waves, but for our purpose its simply a path that light can take in traveling down a fiber. |
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Term
The refractive index is a relationship between what elements of a fiber? |
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Definition
The Core's refractive index and the cladding's refractive index |
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Term
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Definition
This fiber has a core diameter of 30 to over 800um with a constant index of refraction, and with a step change in index at the cladding boundary. Allows many modes of light to travel. |
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Term
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Definition
Small Core diameter of 2 to 8 um helps eliminate dispersion. Propagates one mode efficiently. |
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Term
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Definition
Has a core diameter of 50-125um. The core has numerous concentric layers of glass that decrease in refractive index as they go away from the center. Light rays are refracted continously so that all modes tend to arrive at any point at the same time, reducing dispersion. |
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Term
Which fiber classification has the highest dispersion factor? |
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Definition
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Term
Which fiber type is every efficient for long distance and very high speed applications, but is hard to work with? |
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Definition
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Term
explain the purpose of the meter's range switch |
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Definition
To obtain any of the meter's range or functions |
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Term
Where do you set the function switch for measuring resistance? |
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Definition
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Term
how do you calibrate the meter pointer for zero ohms when you measure resistance? |
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Definition
Short the test leads together and adjust the zero ohms control to move the pointer to zero ohms |
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Term
Which control compensates for the meter's internal batteries? |
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Definition
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Term
Which circuit jacks get the most usage? |
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Definition
The common (-) and (+) jacks |
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Term
WHen might you have to use the reset button? |
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Definition
When an overload (voltage or current) triggers the protection circuit, the reset button "clicks" or "pops up". Pressing down and releasing the reset button should return the meter to normal operation. |
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Term
WHen preparing to measure resistance, what is the first thing you must do before you make a measurement? |
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Definition
be sure that no power is applied to the circuit and that all capacitors are discharged. |
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Term
How often do you "zero" an analog multimeter during resistance measurements? |
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Definition
Each time you select a new range |
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Term
How can you electrically isolate a resistor from its circuit when measuring resistance? |
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Definition
By disconnecting one of the resistor's soldered connections |
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Term
On what part of the meter's scale can you best read resistance measurements? |
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Definition
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Term
What is the difference between measuring DC voltage and AC voltage with regard to the test leads? |
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Definition
The polarity of the leads are not important when measuring in AC. |
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Term
How do you place the test leads in a circuit when you measure voltage? |
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Definition
Place the test leads parallel with the load to measure voltage |
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Term
How do you place the test leads in a circuit to measure current? |
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Definition
Place the test leads in series to measure current |
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