Abstract

We report on limitations of the commonly used method to generate complex optical signal constellations from delay-decorrelated copies of a bit sequence to modulate in-phase (I) and quadrature (Q) components of a signal constellation. Using closed-form analytical solutions, numerical simulations, and an experimental verification, we show that I/Q delays shorter than the combined channel and adaptive equalizer length can result in artificial improvements of the measured bit-error ratio.

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