Abstract

Abstract This paper successfully demonstrates that point-to-point (P2P) superdense wavelength division multiplexing (SDWDM) based on the radio over intersatellite optical wireless communication (Ro-IsOWC) system of 96 channels separated by a 100 GHz bandwidth with 40 GB/s data rate on each stream at a 10,000 km link range has been designed and investigated. The performance of the proposed work has been evaluated by considering the comparison of advanced modulation schemes such as carrier-suppressed return-to-zero (CSRZ), duobinary return-to-zero (DRZ), and modified duobinary return-to-zero (MDRZ) with an optical preamplifier on the bases of bit error rate (BER), quality factor, eye height, and optical signal-to-noise ratio (OSNR) in the clear weather condition. Moreover, the effects of internal parameters such as transceiver aperture diameter and gain of an optical amplifier also have been analyzed with an optimized modulated system. Apart from this, the system performance also has been assessed under varying data rates and OWC frequency ranges with the best-suited modulation format. It has been found that the CSRZ modulation format has shown robust performance and can achieve BER as better as 10−09 with a 5.5 dB quality factor for all wavelengths. It also has been observed that the quality of the received signal deteriorates below an unacceptable value for data rate and link distance beyond 40 GB/s and 10,000 km, respectively.

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