Abstract

We propose a modification of the conventional perturbation-based approach of fiber nonlinearity compensation that enables straight-forward implementation at the receiver and meets feasible complexity requirements. We have developed a model based on perturbation analysis of an inverse Manakov problem, where we use the received signal as the initial condition and solve Manakov equations in the reversed direction, effectively implementing a perturbative digital backward propagation enhanced by machine learning techniques. To determine model coefficients we employ machine learning methods using a training set of transmitted symbols. The proposed approach allowed us to achieve 0.5 dB and 0.2 dB $Q^2$ -factor improvement for 2000 km transmission of 11 × 256 Gbit/s DP-16QAM signal compared to chromatic dispersion equalization and one step per span two samples per symbol digital back-propagation technique, respectively. We quantify the trade-off between performance and complexity.

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