Optiwave software can be used in different industries and applications, including Fiber Optic Communication, Sensing, Pharma/Bio, Military & Satcom, Test & Measurement, Fundamental Research, Solar Panels, Components / Devices, etc..
OptiSystem is a comprehensive software design suite that enables users to plan, test, and simulate optical links in the transmission layer of modern optical networks.
OptiSPICE is the first circuit design software for analysis of integrated circuits including interactions of optical and electronic components. It allows for the design and simulation of opto-electronic circuits at the transistor level, from laser drivers to transimpedance amplifiers, optical interconnects and electronic equalizers.
OptiFDTD is a powerful, highly integrated, and user friendly CAD environment that enables the design and simulation of advanced passive and non-linear photonic components.
OptiBPM is a comprehensive CAD environment used for the design of complex optical waveguides. Perform guiding, coupling, switching, splitting, multiplexing, and demultiplexing of optical signals in photonic devices.
OptiFiber The optimal design of a given optical communication system depends directly on the choice of fiber parameters. OptiFiber uses numerical mode solvers and other models specialized to fibers for calculating dispersion, losses, birefringence, and PMD.
Emerging as a de facto standard over the last decade, OptiGrating has delivered powerful and user friendly design software for modeling integrated and fiber optic devices that incorporate optical gratings.
OptiConverge is a collaborative integration framework that seamlessly combines two or more Optiwave products (e.g., OptiSystem, OptiSPICE, OptiFDTD, etc.) and other third party products into unified solutions. Designed to streamline complex workflows, it empowers users to achieve their goals faster by harnessing the collective power of our trusted Optiwave tools.
Optiwave software can be used in different industries and applications, including Fiber Optic Communication, Sensing, Pharma/Bio, Military & Satcom, Test & Measurement, Fundamental Research, Solar Panels, Components / Devices, etc..
OptiSystem is a comprehensive software design suite that enables users to plan, test, and simulate optical links in the transmission layer of modern optical networks.
OptiSPICE is the first circuit design software for analysis of integrated circuits including interactions of optical and electronic components. It allows for the design and simulation of opto-electronic circuits at the transistor level, from laser drivers to transimpedance amplifiers, optical interconnects and electronic equalizers.
OptiFDTD is a powerful, highly integrated, and user friendly CAD environment that enables the design and simulation of advanced passive and non-linear photonic components.
OptiBPM is a comprehensive CAD environment used for the design of complex optical waveguides. Perform guiding, coupling, switching, splitting, multiplexing, and demultiplexing of optical signals in photonic devices.
OptiFiber The optimal design of a given optical communication system depends directly on the choice of fiber parameters. OptiFiber uses numerical mode solvers and other models specialized to fibers for calculating dispersion, losses, birefringence, and PMD.
Emerging as a de facto standard over the last decade, OptiGrating has delivered powerful and user friendly design software for modeling integrated and fiber optic devices that incorporate optical gratings.
OptiConverge is a collaborative integration framework that seamlessly combines two or more Optiwave products (e.g., OptiSystem, OptiSPICE, OptiFDTD, etc.) and other third party products into unified solutions. Designed to streamline complex workflows, it empowers users to achieve their goals faster by harnessing the collective power of our trusted Optiwave tools.
Thank you very much for your response. I believe the number of FFT points are represented as “maximum number of subcarriers” in the BER Test Set.
I do have basic familiarity with OFDM theory, but the BER Test Set calculation method is still not clear to me. To be more specific, if I want to implement an OFDM-CDMA structure, where every bit of the binary input is first multiplied by a code word, it is easy to implement the multiplication block through Matlab Component after the BER Test Set – please refer to an OFDM sample. That way, since the sequence length in the layout parameters is fixed, the overall bit rate and the input word length are reduced. However, I cannot figure out how to define the BER Test Set bit sequence the same as the Matlab Component output, so it correctly calculates the error.
Another approach is to replace the BER Test Set with a suitable program via Matlab Component, but it would then require a solid knowledge of how the BER Test Set works in OptiSystem. And that is why I started the thread.
Thank you for your response. Regarding BER for OFDM, the help section only emphasizes in a few lines the importance of assigning the same values to the component as the ones used in OFDM transceivers with no other explanations on how the parameters are considered in calculations.
Here I have attached an .osd file of an implementation of a bidirectional system which makes use of coherent QAM both in downstream and upstream. When the downstream signal passes through the channel, it is splitted to two branches, with one going to the downstream receiver and the other to upstream transmitter, to be used as an optical source instead of the laser (which is the whole point of using remodulation technique, BTW). The problem is, though, that there is no upstream signal after the bidirectional fiber, as it can be seen by ‘Optical Spectrum Analyzer_2’. What is the problem?
The system error is not important for me here. I just want to have the signal. Thank you in advance!
In the most common cases, remodulation makes use of RSOA or power splitters. It is not important to me whether or not the system works well in terms of error – that can be fixed. I’d rather to get it to work first, to send the upstream signal through a birdirectional channel and get a signal at upstream receiver.
Here are screen shots from each of the 3 users BER analyzer. The third user signal is probably corrupted, so the BEr analyzer does not show anything. I will let you know in case any progress will be made in making it work.
This file is OptiSystem SAC-OCDM sample as far as I am concerned (so you can find it in OptiSystem samples). I ran the simulation and it went smoothly with acceptable results except for the third user (which you should first enable in the simulation BTW). If you cannot open the file or do the calculation, this is a technical issue and you should contact Optiwave, which will probably answer after the weekend.
I suspect something might be wrong with the way the third code is generated by FBGs. I haven’t worked much on SAC-OCDMA, but if you are interested to know how the codes should be generated, I suggest you thoroughly go through the related comprehensive discussion in the link below:
Thank you very much Antika! I would like to congratulate you on earning your first gift certificate and wish you luck with your research work and forum participation.