Abstract

A newly developed technique for directly measuring fiber dispersion in the frequency domain as a function of wavelength is described. Spectrally filtered white light from a xenon arc lamp is sinusoidally modulated in the range 0 to 1 GHz by an electrooptic modulator and injected into a fiber. The procedure is to vary the modulation frequency and measure the corresponding sideband output power with a photomultiplier and spectrum analyzer. Ratio measurements between the test fiber and a short reference fiber give the baseband frequency response. A number of germanium- and boron-doped fibers have been examined. The least dispersive borosilicate graded-index fiber has a 1 dB bandwidth of 1 GHz, after 1.07 km of propagation at λ = 908 nm. The width broadens gradually with increasing wavelengths up to λ = 1100 nm.

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