Broader bandwidths, denser channel spacing, and higher signal
intensities all makes nonlinear effects more critical to the performance
of telecommunications systems. This comprehensive and didactic overview
explores the nonlinear effects from a physical point of view and
discusses the implications for signal capacity. Enriched with practical
considerations and experimental results, the book offers special
chapters dealing with applications of nonlinear effects for signal
processing, ultrafast-optical switching, wavelength conversion,
nonlinear amplification, and optical phase-conjugation. The author
Thomas Schneider of Deutsche Telekom demonstrates how innovative
thinking can actually exploit nonlinear effects to enhance bandwidth and
overcome previous limitations. Equipped with chapter-end summaries and
problems, this valuable reference can also serve as a graduate-level
textbook