- Carrier-Suppressed Return-to-Zero (CSRZ)
Carrier-Suppressed Return-to-Zero (CSRZ) is an optical
signal format . In CSRZ the field intensity drops to zero between consecutive bits (RZ ), and the field phase alternates by π between neighbouring bits, so that if the phase of the signal is e.g. 0 in even bits (bit number 2"n"), the phase in odd bit slots (bit number 2"n"+1) will be π, the phase alternation amplitude. In its standard form CSRZ is generated by a singleMach-Zehnder Modulator (MZM ), driven by two sinusoidal waves at half the bit rate BR, and in phase opposition. This gives rise to characteristically broad pulses (duty cycle 67%).The signal format
Alternate-Phase Return-to-Zero (APRZ) can be viewed as a generalisation of CSRZ in which the phase alternation can take up any value "ΔΦ" (and not necessarily only π) and theduty cycle is also a free parameter.CSRZ can be used to generate specific optical modulation formats, e.g. CSRZ-
OOK , in which data is coded on the intensity of the signal using a binary scheme (light on=1, light off=0), or CSRZ-DPSK, in which data is coded on the differential phase of the signal, etc. CSRZ is often used to designate APRZ-OOK.The characteristic properties of an CSRZ signal are those to have a spectrum similar to that of an RZ signal, except that frequency peaks (still at a spacing of "BR") are shifted by "BR"/2 with respect to RZ, so that no peak is present at the carrier and power is ideally zero at the carrier frequency (hence the name).
Compared to standard RZ-OOK, the CSRZ-OOK is considered to be more tolerant to filtering and
chromatic dispersion , thanks to its narrowerspectrum .
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