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Sommaire du brevet 2178952 

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Disponibilité de l'Abrégé et des Revendications

L'apparition de différences dans le texte et l'image des Revendications et de l'Abrégé dépend du moment auquel le document est publié. Les textes des Revendications et de l'Abrégé sont affichés :

  • lorsque la demande peut être examinée par le public;
  • lorsque le brevet est émis (délivrance).
(12) Demande de brevet: (11) CA 2178952
(54) Titre français: SURVEILLANCE DE LIGNES OPTIQUES DE RACCORDEMENT A LARGE BANDE JUSQU'A UNE INTERFACE PASSIVE
(54) Titre anglais: SURVEILLANCE OF OPTICAL BROAD-BAND CONNECTION LINES UP TO A PASSIVE INTERFACE
Statut: Réputée abandonnée et au-delà du délai pour le rétablissement - en attente de la réponse à l’avis de communication rejetée
Données bibliographiques
(51) Classification internationale des brevets (CIB):
  • G01M 11/00 (2006.01)
(72) Inventeurs :
  • DERR, FROWIN (Allemagne)
(73) Titulaires :
  • SIEMENS AKTIENGESELLSCHAFT
(71) Demandeurs :
  • SIEMENS AKTIENGESELLSCHAFT (Allemagne)
(74) Agent: SMART & BIGGAR LP
(74) Co-agent:
(45) Délivré:
(86) Date de dépôt PCT: 1994-12-01
(87) Mise à la disponibilité du public: 1995-06-22
Licence disponible: S.O.
Cédé au domaine public: S.O.
(25) Langue des documents déposés: Anglais

Traité de coopération en matière de brevets (PCT): Oui
(86) Numéro de la demande PCT: PCT/DE1994/001424
(87) Numéro de publication internationale PCT: DE1994001424
(85) Entrée nationale: 1996-06-13

(30) Données de priorité de la demande:
Numéro de la demande Pays / territoire Date
P 43 42 792.8 (Allemagne) 1993-12-15
P 44 11 376.5 (Allemagne) 1994-03-31

Abrégés

Abrégé français

Un signal binaire de bruit pseudo-aléatoire est transmis avec le signal d'information depuis une unité de raccordement à grande longueur d'onde. Une partie réduite du signal optique est déviée sur un embranchement au niveau de l'interface passive et retransmise à l'unité de raccordement, puis transmise, avec le signal optique reçu en sens inverse, au transducteur optoélectrique. Le signal électrique de réception est soumis à une corrélation avec le signal binaire originel de bruit pseudo-aléatoire entre-temps retardé. L'amplitude des signaux de corrélation ainsi obtenue indique, en tenant compte du temps de propagation du signal, l'occurrence ou la non-occurrence du signal binaire de bruit pseudo-aléatoire réfléchi par l'interface passive (PNT1)


Abrégé anglais


Monitoring optical broadband service cables up to
passive interface
A pseudo-noise binary signal is transmitted
together with the information signal from an OWG line
unit, and a small component of the optical signal is
branched off at the passive interface and transmitted
back to the line unit and fed there to the optoelectric
transducer together with the optical signal received from
the opposite end; the received electric signal is sub-
jected to a correlation with the original pseudo-noise
binary signal which has in the meantime been delayed in
time, after which the correlation signal amplitude
obtained in the process indicates correctly in terms of
signal propagation time the occurrence or nonoccurrence
of the pseudo-noise binary signal reflected by the
passive interface (PNT1).

Revendications

Note : Les revendications sont présentées dans la langue officielle dans laquelle elles ont été soumises.


- 16 -
Patent claims
1. A method for monitoring the section of an optical broadband service
cable, in particular a broadband subscriber line (OAL), situated between an OWG line
unit, in particular the subscriber line unit (LT) at the exchange end and a defined
passive optical interface (PNT1), characterized in that together with the information
signal to be transmitted over the optical broadband service cable (OAL) in the
downstream direction, a pseudo-noise binary signal is also transmitted from the OWF
line unit (LT), in that a small component of the optical downstream signal transmitted
from the line unit (LT) is fed back from the passive interface (PNT1) in the upstream
direction to the line unit (LT), where it is converted into an electric signal in the
optical receiver provided there together with components, possibly reflected at other
reflection points of the optical broadband service cable, of the optical downstream
signal and with the optical upstream signal received via the optical broadband service
cable (OAL), and in that this electric signal and the original pseudo-noise binary signal,
which is delayed in time in accordance with the signal propagation time from the line
unit (LT) on the broadband service cable (OAL) to the passive interface (PNT1) and
back again, are fed to a signal correlator, which has a multiplier (X) with a
downstream integrator (J) and whose output signal amplitude is monitored correctly
in terms of signal propagation time for the occurrence of the pseudo-noise binary
signal reflected from the passive interface (PNT1).

-17-
characterized in that the pseudo-noise binary signal required at the transmitting end
and the time-delayed pseudo-noise binary signal to be fed to the correlator are
generated by two separate pseudo-noise generators having correspondingly differing
starting values.
2. The method as claimed in claim 1, characterized in that in the OWG line
unit (LT) the biasing current of the laser diode provided there as optical transmitter
is amplitude-modulated with the pseudo-noise binary signal.
3. The method as claimed in claim 1, characterized in that in the OWG line
unit (LT) the electric drive signal of the optical transmitter (e/o) provided there has the
pseudo-noise binary signal additively super-imposed on it.
4. The method as claimed in claim 1, characterized in that in the OWG line
unit (LT) there is added to the drive signal of the optical transmitter provided there a
pilot audio signal which is situated outside the frequency range occupied by theinformation signal to be transmitted in the upstream direction and has been modulated
with the pseudo-noise binary signal, and in that at the receiving end the carrier-borne
pseudo-noise binary signal sequence received as a function of reflection is
demodulated again before the correlation.
5. The method as claimed in one of claims 1 to 4, characterized in that the
correlation signal is subjected to a threshold value decision whose result indicates the
occurrence or nonoccurrence of the pseudo-noise binary signal reflected from thepassive interface (PNT1).

- 18-
6. The method as claimed in one of claims 1 to 5, characterized in that the
correlation signal is subjected to a multistage threshold value decision whose result
additionally forms a measure of the quality of the optical service cable (OAL) between
the OWG line unit (LT) and passive interface (PNT1).

Description

Note : Les descriptions sont présentées dans la langue officielle dans laquelle elles ont été soumises.


-/, . . 2 1 78~52
~GR 93 P 1855 P
~'LE, P~' Tr ~ ~. J~-
Foreign version T~:3 T~ r,:_
DQscription
Monitoring optical bLua~ d service cahles up to a
passive interfacs
In accordance with CCITT, an optical B-ISDN
subscriber line is u6ually realized such that at the end
of that part of the optic~l subscriber line for which the
n~twork provider i8 r~p~n~hle, that i~ to say at the
80-Ca11ed IJB interface, the optical li~e i8 ter~inated by
13 means of a so-called network termination (N~l) (CCITT
~c. I.432).
This NTl network ter ination oompriaes optoelec-
tric and alectrooptic transducsrs, correctly t~inAt^~
th~ subscriber lin~ with r~gard to operation, administra-
tion and .^-~nt-~n,n. e (OAM) and ~akea available in the
direction towards the subscriber a standardized
bidirectional broadband interface, the so-aalled TB
interfacQ, also termed the user-network interface (~NI).
The ~ignals in the two transmiasion directions have a
gross baud rate of 155.52 Nbit/s in each case both at the
~xchange end of the line t~;nAt ~ ~n NTl (at the ~rB
interfac-) and on the 3ubscriber sidQ (at the TB inter-
fac~), and comprise either a seguence of bytswise fra~es
in accordance with the ~irst stage STMl (STM T Synchron-
OU8 Transport Module) o~ the so-called synchronous
digital hierarchy (SD~:), in whose in~ormation-carrying
part so-call~d ATM cslls (~x. 149.76 ~bit/s) are trans-
mitted with a 53 byte length each (ATM Asynchronous
Transfer ~ode), or colq?rise a pure se5~uence o_ ATM cells,
~0 the cell data rats useful for information transmi3sion
likewise b~ins 149 . 76 ~bit/s .
Since the NTl line tsrmination is relatively
complex and reguire~ space, electric power and relatively
expensivQ ~lc~ ytic and optoelectric tr~n~ D~s~
pos~ibly Qven battery
_ _

2 ~ 7 8 9~2
GR 93 P 1855 P - 2 -
back-up, in order to bridge failures in th- utility grid,
proposals have b-en made in thQ CCITT and ETSI to realize
optical B-ISDN subscriber lines by means of a so-called
"pas~ive NTl", that i8 to say in essence to provide
5 simply an optical connector at the t~l e~ tions
interfac~ between th~ network provider and user, up to
which the network provider has the r^~F~In~h; 1 ~ ty for
acceptable functioning (CCITT COM XVIII No. D.928, D.lll9
and D.1144; ETSI NA5 No. TD90/96; ETSI TM3 No.
1 0 ( I ' _ "_d) ) .
A similar sltuation exists in the TJSA, wher~ by
contra~t with the conditions ih 3urope and Japar~ and to
the relevant ETSI rs~ Atiora and CCITT re~
tiohs the interfac- between the network provider and user
15 is not the T~ interface but the ~3 interface; the NTl
line ter~ination i8 thus - ,let~ly in the po9~ a~r~n of
the cohnected subscriber. There are proposals similar to
those for the npassiYe NTl~ in the USA, it being assumed
that ah optical bus structur~ having taps (a so-called
20 "daisy chainn) is cornected on the subscrib~r side, which
per_its the simpl~ realization of LANs (I,ocal Area
~T~
In each case, the subscriber ter~nination must now
b~A p~-nDntly _onitored auto_atically with regard to its
25 acceptAble functioning; in modern ~ ~ ~tion retworks,
comprehensive, as far a~ possihle Cully automatic perma-
n~ent _onitoring is a mandatorY requirenent of the network
proYiders. In the case of cos~nection con~igurations which
contaih ~ true NTl l~ne termi~ation in the area of
30 respohsibility of the network proYider, this is pcssihle
in a comprehensive fashion which is r~latively without
problems, since it is poss;hle ih the so-called ~ v~ '
o~E the B-ISDN signal (in bytes, provided for the purpose,
in the STM-l frame or, in the casu of cell tr~n~ aion~
35 in O~M c~lls provided for the purpose) to transmit
c~nt;n~o~ly a plenitude of relevant ite_s of OAM inform-
ation in both directions betweeh the NTl line ter ination
and the ~h~ or an appropriate bL~-lL.qnd subscriber
li3e u:lit at the 3~twork end~
ANENDED S~EET

21 78952
¢R 93 P 1~55 P - 3 -
and since lt 1B p~pa~hle to for~ suit b~e electric,
cptical or aS least logic loops betwoen the outsoin~ and
return dlrections ln the N'rl lin~ t~ n-tlnn .
9y contr~st, given r^np^n~Thillty of th- network
5 providcr only for th~ optlcal subscriber line auto2~atlc
p~-n~nt ~onitorl~g of thlg optlcal 8~ 'h^ llne i3
no longer directly poE3;hle, even if the subscrlber
pos6esses an NTl line ter~in~tlon wlth which the network
provider could in princlple ~ t~ in th~ way
10 described above. Sp~n;f;~ ly, the line t~n~t~nn can,
for exa~nple, have been swltc~ed off by the subscriber,
acd it is then no longer directly po~o;hle for the
networ~c provider to ~stabli3h whether there is a ~alfunc-
tion ln hls own ar~a of renpnnRih; l; ty, for example
15 becau3e an e~ccavator has damaged the optlcal ~ubscriber
llne, or whether the fault is ln the area o~ r~Rpnno;h;l-
lty of the subscr~ber. Sinc~, on the other hand, the
~bscriber i8 generally by no means t~hnir~lly capable
of judging wheth~r it is the sectlcn of the broadband
20 line in his po~se~o;nn that has falled, or the sectlon at
t_e srid end, a plenltude of possibly uTl~ustified co~-
plaints c n ari3e, ~d the neSwork provider ust then
establi_h by ~eans of relatively expensive neasures
whether he is hiTn3elf re3ponsible for the trouble and has
25 to renove the latter, or whether the reTno~ral of the
troubl~ is the r~RpnnR;h;~ity of the sub_criber.
It ~aa therefor~ proved to be desirable to be
able to nTonltor automatically whether trouble or inter-
ruptions occur on optical 3ubscriber line3 in the area of
30 responR;hll; ty of the network provider.
There is already known for this purpose a method
for ~onitoring the 3ectlon, situated between an OWG line
unit, in particular the subscriber line unit at the
exchange end, and a defined passive optic~l interfac-,
A.~3ND3D S~EET

2 ~ 78952
GR 93 P 1855 P - 4 ~
of an optical broad'oant service cable, in p~lrticular a
broadbaTld gubscriber lin~, to th~ effect t~at a siru-
soidal pilot audio signal of le88er amplitude and having
a r.~u~i~ which i8 situated outside t_e spectral regio~
5 oc~ ri^~T by the infor3ation oignal to be transmittsd Ls
added in thg OWG line u~it to th~ ~lectric drive signal
of the optical trsnsmitter ~rovided th^r^, at the passive
interfac~ ~ small ~ t of th~ optical aigr~al traTls-
mitted ~ro~s t_~ lTn- unit to the subgcriber l8 h~ ar~.h^~7
10 cfC, poasibly ~y refl-^-ction c~used ~ o-~ T~y by mesrs
of an optical ~^ t~hl-~ conn-ction provided ~t the
passive int~rfac~, ~d led bac~c in the ravers~ directior~
to th~^ line u~it whero it is convertDd, in the optical
rGceiver provided t~ers, ~ose~ h~r with the optical sig al
15 received from the subscriber i to an ~l~ctric aignal, and
the pilot audio ~ig~al ~o~t~ ^d t~erein ia branched off
wit~ the ~id of a fre~ency-~iGlGctive filt3r and ~as it~
a~litud~ aubjGctsd to a ~irgl~ tage. or multistage
t_reshold valuG ~ whos^ r~sult for~ ~ measur~ of
20 the quality of the optical aGrvic^ cabl~ between the line
unit ard passive int~rfac..; in this case, th~ ~nfo~-ti~
~ignal of or~e t-?~ ti~ direction which is to be
transs~itted car. be carrier-bor e ~lectrically before the
modulatio:~ of the optical transmitt-^r in JUch ~ way that
25 it i8 convGrtet irto a sp~ctral r_gion not occ~ri^; by
the b~n^T~ i irfor~ation . ig al of t_e opposite direc-
tion, and a pilot audio signal having a r . ~l.G~-.;y situ-
ated outside t~e two spectral regions of thc irfor~atiou
~;g~als can be tran~Tmitted (EP 93113290 6)
Furl h. Gt ~or the purpose of ~onitorirg an
optical ~road~ard aervice cable it is 3~nown to proceed in
such ~ way t~at
- an optical downstr~aTs sig~al formed from an inforsation
signal to ~e transmitted in the downstraam dirGction over
the optical broadba~d ~er~ice cable and a nitoring
tiignal in the for~s of a p~eudo-noise binary ~ignal ~ 8
transmitted ~ro~s an OWG lin~ unit,
A~DED 5~2

21 78952
GR 93 P 1855 P 5/1
- , ~nto, reflected at F-F-;hle reflection pointa of
the optical bL~ '' ' servic~ cable, of the optical
downstream signal are transmitted baclc in the upstrean
direction to the OWG line unlt and converted i~to an
e~lectrlc signal ln the optic^l receiver, provided there,
together with a~ optical ~sLLGeu~l signal received oYer
the optical broadband servicG cable,
- and the reflected monitoring signal, contai~ed therein,
is evaluated by virtue of the fact that the said Qlectric
signal and the pseudo-noise binary signal, which is
dGlayed by a delay time period which co~ ~ c~.,LLds to the
signal propagation tine on the ~. ~ a~d service cable
between the OWG line unit and reflection point out to and
back again, are f ed to a signal correlator, having a
~ultiplier with a downstrea~ integrator, whose output
signal anplitude demonstrat~s correctly in terms of
signal propagation time the oc.-L G ce of a reflected
pseudo-noise bin~ry sicnal f _ ' t (WO92/11710; further
~in Optical Time Domain Reflectometers (OTDR)
WO87/07014; l;!r~ CS L3TT~RS 16(1980)16, 629).
In this case, the test code pulse sequence
re~auired at the transmitting end can be generated by a
first pseudo-noise binary signal generator, and the same
code pulsc secuence can be generated, but shi~ted in
ti7re, by a second pseudo-noise bi~ary aignal generator
operating syTlchronously, the tine shift being effected by
a control device to which there are applied the cloc3c
signal of the first pseudo-noise binary signal generator
and a franing signal irdicating to it the he5;nn;T~ of
each test code pul~e secuence, and which, for its part,
synchronizes the second pseudo-noise binary signal
generator in accordance with the desired tine shift input
into it from a PC (WO-92-11710), the time shift being
effect~d by a ti~e-delay unit which is situated betweer,
the second pseudo-nois~ binary signal generator and the
first psGudo-noise binary signal generator (W087/07014),
AMENDE D SiIEET

2l 7~952
GR 93 P 1855 P 5~2
or the time shift being effected by a time-delay unit vJa
which a synchronous 08cillator directly driving the first
pseudo-noiae binary ~ign~l generator drives the second
pseudo-noise binary signal generator in a cG-~a~- ~;n~ly
delayed fashion (Rr.r--- LElTERS 16 (1980) 16, 629).
~owever, it is rel~tively ~xpensive to producc
thc required time shif t by a PC-controlled synchronous
control device or by a controllable ti3e-delay unit, and
the invention de20nstrates, by contrast, a way of reduc-
ing thia cost.
The invention rslatea to a :lethod for 30nitoring
the section of an optical broadband service cablQ, in
particular ~ broadband sub8criber line, situ~ted betwecn
a~ OWG line unit, in particular a sUb3criber line unit at
the exchange end and a defined passivc optical interface,
to the effect that
- an optical down3tream signal for2ed from an infor~ation
signal, to be transmitted in the ~'- L~c~ direction
over the optical broadband service cablc, and a pseudo-
noise binary signal i8 transmitted from the OWG line
U~Lit,
- a small ~ -nt of the optical downstre~m signal is
trans2itted from the passiv~ optlcal intcrface in the
upstre~ direction back to the OWG line unit, where it is
converted into an electric signal in the optical receiver
provided ther~ together with ~ _~nn~nts, possibly
reflected at other reflection points of the optical
broadba~d service cable, of the optical downstrea3 signal
and with ~n optical upstrea2 aignal received via the
3 0 optical broadband service cable,
- and the r~flected 20nitoring 8ignal cnnt~ne<? therein
is evaluated with regard to it~ reflection at the ~assive
optical i~terfacc by providing that the s~id electric
.aM3NDED S}~EET

2 1 789~2
GR 93 P 1855 P 5/3
signal ~d the pseudo-noi8e binary signal, which i~
delayed by a delay time period which cv ..~.~v~d~ to the
sig~al propagation tim~ on the broadband service cable
from the OWG line unit to the p~ssive optical int~rface
5 a~ld back again, ~r~ fed to a ~ignal correlator which as
a multiplier with ~ downatream integrator and whose
output signal amplitud~ is monitored correctly in ter~ns
of signal propagation time for the oC.~,L~,. ce of th~
p~eudo-noi~e binary signal _ _ - t reflected from th~
10 pas8ive optical interface; this method is characterized
according to the invention in that the pseudo-noise
binary signal r~quired at th- transriitting end and the
time-delayed pseudo-nois~ binary signal to b~ fed to th~
correlator are generated by two separata pseudo-nois~
15 generators having CO~L~ 1ln~1Y differing starting
values .
The i~vention is attended by t~e advantag~ of
being able to set the desired delay time dir~ctly by
means of al!~Lv~Llately differing prs~etting of t~e two
20 ps~udo-noise generators [generally to bR formed a~ llhift
register chains closed to produce a ring in each case~
with the aid o~ ~ microproc~ssor, which is to be provided
in any case for the purpose of further processing the
corr~lator output signal (integration r~sult), w~thout
25 ther~ being a need ~or a ~upplementary control unit or
time-delay unit; it thus renders it pos~ible in the case
of the monitoring of an optical broadbard service cable
up to a passive interface, the reflection of which i8
utilized, to combat ln a cost-saving way ~
30 caused by additional reflections at other points on the
optical service cahle to be ~onitored, or co~Lplications
in the evaluation of the desired reflection, and thus
r~nders possible in an advantageous way simple ~nd
reli~ble nitoring of the optical broadband service
35 cabl~ between the OWG line unit at the excha~gQ e~d and
th~ defined passive optlcal interfac~, which may delimit
th~ area of resp~n~hility of the networlc provider. The
A25ENDED S~T
_ _ _ . _

-
2 1 789~2
GR 93 P 1855 P - 6 -
line unit at th~ exchange end can in thi~ c/Lse ~180 be
remote from th~ ~ctual exchang~, and lil~w~5~ ther~ iJ no
n~ed for tho pa~JiV~ optical interf~c~ to be provlded
directly uJ~_L~ ~ of a subscriber~ statlon.
In order to tran~mit the blnary pseudo-noise
r~ndo~ signal, it is po~ih~ ~ in a further ~ t of
the invention for the biasing current of a laser dlod~
provided a8 optical transr~itter in the OWG ll~e unit to
be ~pliLud~ ted with th~ binary pseudo-noiso
r~ndom ~lgnal. AJ ~n alternative to this, it ia ~L180
posslble for the binary p8eudo-noise rando~ signal to be
superimposed additively ~n the OWG line unit to the
clactric control signal of th~ optical tranamitter
provid~d ther~.
In order to avoid i llp9~ hl~ noi8e level3
within the useful bandwidth of the optical 8ignal, it is,
f$~ally, also possible ln ~ further ~ ' t of the
invention that in the OWG line unit ther~ i8 added to th~
el~ctric drlv~ signal of th~ optic~l tr namitter provlded
ther~ ~ pilot audlo signal which i8 Jituated outside th~
frequency range occupied by the information ~ignal to b~
tran~itted and has beerL modulated with the blnary
pseudo-nolse random signal; at the recelving end the
carrier-borne pseudo-noise hinary slgnal sequencs will
then have to he ~ -' lated befor~ the correlatlon.
Further particularitie~ of th~ invention ay be
gathered frorL the following description with the aid of
the drawlngs, ln which:
AM~21DED S~ T

21 78952
GR 93 P 1855 P - 7 -
Eigure 1 shows th~ monitoring of an optical l,~oadbc~d
~ervice csbl~ having only one optical fiber,
~nd
Figure 2 shows the monitoring of an optical broadb~d
servic- cablo having two separat~ optical
fibers for thn two tr~n~r~i^n directions; and
Figure 3 shows an exa~ple of a correlation curv~.
Repr~sented diagrammatically in Figure 1 to an
extent re~uir~d to underatand the invention i8 a
bidirectional OWG (optical waveguide) tel~- ;c?tions
system having a ~preferably - '-) OWG s-rvice cable
OA~ with only one optical fiber for tran3mitting the
optical signals of both tr~nP~; ~Einn directions: this
optical fiervic~ cable, which in the exemplary ' ~ t
accorting to Figur~ 1 extend3 between a subscriber line
u it ~T at the a~ch~ end and a 3ubscriber~ 8 sta-
tion TSt, may be r~iuired to be monitored from the
^T~ n~e up to a pas3ive optical interface PNTl.
~n general, various ~odes of operation are
F~E;hl~ at a pnEsive optical interface, aa will also b~
~urther illustrated in the following ~ n~ti^n~ such
as, for exa~ple,
l-fiber wavelength divi3ion multiplex with 1.3~+ and
1. 3 ~L-, and
l-fiber wavelength division multiplex with 1.5~L and
1.3~, and
2 - ~iber operation;
~'130 possible is a data 8ignal tr~n~ lnn in one
dl rection in the basebar,d ar,d in the other direction in
modulated form.
The principle of the invention can be applied
independently of the optical con~iguration used and of
the type of data tran3mission. Only the attenuation and
reflection parametsrs diffar from one another. For this
reason, the optical cirouit in Figure l is also to be
urderstood only as a diagram of the principle.
In the l ~ t considered, as also
i3dicated in Figur~ 1, the passive interface PNTl i3
r~ali~ed by me~n3 of an optical demountable connection ir.
which the optical

GR 93 P 1855 P - 8 - 21 7 8 9 52
endfaee of the part of the ~ ' hle eon~ecticn whic}l
is ~LL~ ~,1 at thH eYchange Qnd m~y be provided with a
ref lecting eoating r
At the passive interfae- P~ll, a small fraetio ~
5 of th~ optieal ~ignal transmittet from th~ li3e unit } T
to thY 8 ~hlvQ~--ih~ '~ statio~ TSt is l-- _- - l-or3 off and fed
~c3c in the r~verse direetion to thQ l~nl~ unit LT In th~
1 9 y , t aecording to PlgurQ 1, this is
p_L' `1 in sueh a way as to rQfleet at t~e passive
10 ~ntarf~e~ PNTl a portion of the light transm~ tted from
the li 8 unit LT T~- optieal signal fed }~aek to t~e line
Lnit LT is eorverted there in the optieal reeeiver e\o
(a~ th~ e~s~ may ~e, together ~it~ the optieal sig3al
r~eaived from t e ~ubscri~er' 8 tatio3 TSt~ into an
15 eleetrie l~ig~al
In the ~Y~ a~y ~ ' ' t aeeordi g to
Figure 1, aecording to whieh tbe optic~l serv~ co
~able oal has o ~ly one opt~ eal ~ber via which t e
optical ~ gnals of ~oth ~ an~; nr ~n dir~etions ~re
20 transmi~ted, tbis t; a~ r~^n c~n proc-Qd i3 ~oth
directions in tho ~ame optical ~rindow: Tho wavelength cf
t'~e laser transmitter Q/O at t Q ~ y~ end is in t is
case, at 1 3 IL, for eYample, ~pproxi2at~ly ~gual to the
wavelensth of t~e (not represented in d~tail in Fisur~ 1)
25 #lc_L-~ tical t I nQ~llr~ of the ~lhs~-~h~' s ~tation
~st; in order to prevent mutual intsrf~rence between the
two ele_L,~ tieal ~ nQ~ 8 ~ven in eost-optimized
syat~s C~t~ 5 no isolator3, a~d to prevent p~Q~hl~
heterodyning (form Ition of ~xed product~ from tl~e
30 d~ffarent signals because of th~ 'nl ~n~ response of
the opt ~ cal receiver) - whieh het~r~dynir~g may lead to
undesired int~rf erenee ~ot_ with t e useful signal and
with ~e pilot audio 9ignal, the wavelengths used ~or t e
two tr~n~m; Qsi^n direetions ar~, however, not per~itted
35 to be exactly egual or ne~rly exactly ~cual For this
reason, in Pigure 1 the wavelengths are denoted as 1 3 ~-
~nd 1 3 ~+ ~owever, inste~d of an opt~ eal l,rindow situ-
~ted at 1 3 f~, it is also por~hlL~ to usel a3 optical
wi~Ldow 8ituat8d, fo~ oxampl~, ~t 1 55 f~

2 1 78~52
GR 93 P la55 P - g -
~ f, in a departure ~ro~ the conditions indicated
in Figure 1, the optical signalg or the two tr~ n
directicns ar~ trans_itted in dif rereIlt optical windows,
for exa_ple at 1.3 ~ in on~ tr~nD--;ssion direction and at
5 l . 55 ~ in the other tr~n~$ ~s~n direction, tb.c reflec-
tion point ~t the passive optical interfaco PNT1 can also
b~ constructed in a wavelength-selective fashion, with
t~e result that it is ~ !''nt~ y only the optical signal
w:~ich is trans3litted in th~ direction towards the sub-
10 s~riber's 6tation TSt and c~n~ l~n~ the pseudo-noise (PN)
binary 3ignal which is parti~lly r2flected.
Represe3t~d diagram~atically in Figure 2 to the
extent required to understand the invention is an ~xemp-
lary ~ J~ t of a bidir~ction~l OWG tel~. ~c2tions
15 syst2m having a (preferably ~ ) OWG service cable
OAI which has a separate optical fiber for each trans-
mission direction, it being possible for the optical
~ignals of the two tr~n~m~ ~s1~n directions to be trans-
m tted at the game wav~length or at di r rerent wave-
20 lengths. This optical service cable OAI" which in the
_ l ~ry ~ t according to Figure 2 again extendsb~tween a subscriber line unit ~T ~t the exchange end and
a ~ubscriber' 8 station TSt, may, ~gain, need to be
monitored ~rom the exchange end up to a passive optical
25 interf~ce PNT1. For this purpose, again a PN binary
~i.gnal is added to tl~e infor~ation signal to be trans-
m~ tted o~er the OWG service cable 0~.
At the paEIsive interface PNT1, again, a s_all
fracti on of the optical signal transm tted from the line
30 unit 21T to the subscriber TSt is ~ranched off and fed
bsck in the reverse d~ rection to the line unit ~T . ~t is
indicated in Figure 2 in this regard that couplers V in
the fo= of passive optical couplers between which an
optical feedbac3c path R extr-nds are provided on the side
35 of the passive optical intarface PNTl facing the lire
u~i t LT .

1 78952
G}~ 93 P 1855 P - 10 _ 2
The optiaal signalg can be ln~n~ and coupled
out in this case by means of a ,y -tLlcal passive optical
couplers
Via the~ feedback path R, a small fraction of the
5 optioal signal tranamitted ~rom the subscriber lin-
u~it LT to th~ subscrib~r~ 8 stat~ on TSt passes back in
th~ direction towards the subscriber line unit LT where
it is convert-d in the optical receiver ~\o provided
there into an electric signal togethQr with the optical
10 signal received fro~ the ~ubsoriber TSt
It is indicated i3 Figure 1 that a ~odulation
circuit M for the information signal to be transmitted
and an operati g point control circuit A belong to the
laser diode provided as optical tran~mitter Such cir-
15 cuita ar~ knowQ i principle (for exa~ple fro~D~-A1-4125075) and do not requirQ further explanation
here
In th{~ exe2plary -'; t in acco ~c~ with
Figur~ 1, the method according to the invention is baaed
20 on the corr-lation betwee~ d paeudo-nois~ (PN) bit
8ecue"ce generated by a generator G and the reflected
-~t of an optical signal whose ~ean value was
dulated ~y meana of the la~er biasing current ib~ with
t~e aame PN bit aec,uence TQe PN bit aequence i8 a pseudo
25 raQdom sequenc~ of binary signal ~le2ents O, 1 (or -1,
I 1~ such as can be generated with a period p 2n-1 by
means of an n-stage shi~t regiater haviT~g linear feed-
bac3c ~he biasing CurreQt i~ " of tQe laser diode at the
LT end (LT beiQg the line termination at the subacriber
-30 line networX end) ia a2plitude-nodulated u~ins the raQdom
sequence of the PN geQerator G WitQ a 8mall raQge of, for
example, 10%
The optical dowQatream aigQal, which is modulated
by the information sigQal which is to be traQsmitted from
35 the OWG line UQit LT over the optical broadbaQd service
cable 0~ L in tQe down~tream direotion, on the one haQd,
aQd whose meaQ value is 1 ~te~l using the PN bit
sequenc~, on th~ other haQd, is more or less strongly
re_lected at all Fo~P;hle reflection points

21 78952
GR 93 P 1855 P
of the optical broadband service cable OA~, and thus al80
at the passive optical interfac~, which effects a deflned
(deaired) reflection (for example, with ~ reflection
factor of 10%).
The optic~l signal receivced by th~ line unit LT
in the upstrea~ direction cnnt~n~ the TSt ;nforT^-tinn
signal ori~;n ~t~ng in the subacriber~8 station TSt,
reflected ~ of the LT infor;l~ation signal trans-
mitted in the down8trea~ direction, reflected ~
of the PN bi~ary signal and interference (for cxample,
noiae) in the receiver input atageg, the levelg ~p-~n~?;n5
on the optical configuration and the type of data trans-
fer. Thia aignal is now correlated - as the case ~ay be,
amplified but not yet regenerated (in tis~e) - with the
PN aeguence, delayed in time by a delay time period r
which corresponds to the signal propagation ti~e from the
line unit ~T to the passive interface PNT1 and bac3c
again, that is to say this signal is 31ultiplied and
sub8equently integrated over a plurality of PN s~, r~r~;
the output sig~al resulting fro~ the correlation corres-
ponds in amplitude to the reflected aign~ ^nts
having an optical aignal propagation ti~e in the region
of ~he ti~e delay ~. ~his correlation aignal is finally
monitor~d correctly in ter~s of signal propagation ti~e
for the DC~u~ ~ c ~ce of the pseudo-noiae binary signal
reflect2d from the passive interfacs PNTl, something
which can procced in th~ manner of an amplitude threshold
value decision. Threshold value ~ ; nn~ are generally
~cnown, and 80 there is no need for any further explan-
ations on thia. It may be pointed out in particular in
this connection that the correlation signal can alao, as
the case nay be, be subjected to not o~ly a single-stage,
but alao a ~ultistage threshold value ~c;~n the result
of which additionally for 8 a ;lleasure of the guality of
3 5 the optical service cable OAI, between the OWG line
unit LT and the pas8ive interface PNTl.
The ti e delay T can be realized ~dvantageously
by generating the PN se~ for the biasing current
1 ~t~r A ~in

2 1 78952
GR 93 P 1855 P - 12 -
Fisure 1) and for t_e corr~lator S, J (in Figure 1 and
Fisur~ 2) by two separatQ PN gen-rators (G, G in Fig-
ure 2) formed by means of shift register chains, in which
diferent start~ng v~lues ar~ prescribed, from a ~icro-
processor I~P, in the form of an ~Lyyl~p lately dlffering
pLc~c~ 2 of their shif t resistQr chAins . The ~elec-
tion of these starting values det~;n~ th~ tima delay 7
of the PN se~iu~n~ e, fed to th~ correlator X, J (in
Figure 1 and Figure 2), with respect to the PN 8-, ~a
f~d to the ~ ' lator (A in Fisur~ 1; e/o in Fisure 2).
Interf erence terms ar~ filtered out hy the
i tegration downstr~am of the multiplication of the
re1ectsd signal and time-delayed sis al. The achievable
signal-to-noise ratio of the integrated sisnal, and thus
o~ the correlator output sisnal, depends on the param~-
tars of the optical signal c ~nta, ~ut al~o essen-
tially on the integration time. The correlator output
signal (integration result) can ~e subject~d to A/D
converaio3 and further processed in the downstream
mi~ ,y OCe~60L ~LP. The distance of the reflection loca-
tio~ can be calculated given a known group velocity of
the optical signal.
The microprocessor ~P can ~irstly also tak~ over
the setting of different time delays 7 in a --1 ;hrat ;~
operation, in order to dete~;~ all the reflection
e~n1-~ on the individual route sections. The spati~1
resolution ~1 increases linearly in this case with the
clock rate at which the laser biasing current is a=pli-
tude-modulated; it is ~1 ~ c/2f, in which c is the ~roup
velocity of the optical signal and f the clock fraquency
of the pseudo-noise bit sequence. The maxinum ~oritorable
route length 13a,~ is also det~;n~d by the temporal
length of the PN period; it is 13~ cp/2f, in which p
is the period of th~ PN bit sequenca.
Figure 3 shows diagrammatically the characteris-
tic of th~ correlator output signal as a function of the
time delay r. The measurement points h;~hl ;~hee~' on the
correlation curvq have a spacing

21 78952
,, .
GR 93 P 1855 P - 13 -
which cu~ u,.ds to the length of ~ individual bit of
the PN 8~, r nl~o. The correlatlon curve 2ay be baaed in
the exa~nple on a clock rate of 100 k!~z and a paeudo-~oise
~it se~uence having a length of 25-l bits (and thus a
period o 310 ~8); the group velocity of the 3ig al 03
the optical rout~ 2ay be 0 . 2 k2/,us . CG~ ". r~; n5 to a
forward and return tirle or ti2e delay r of 200 ~8 in the
~xa2ple, is a diatance ~ro2 tha r-flection location of
20 k2; the passiv~- inturfac~ PNTl (in Fisure 1 ~nd
Figur~ 2) 2ay bo located at this distzmc~ in the exa2ple.
raki2s account o~ the two-fold ~-~ nn ti2e of the
~ignal to the r~flection locatlon ~nd back aga n, ther~
is a spatial re~olu~ ;nn A1 C 11 k2 and a 20nitorable
route lengt~ ", of at 20st 31 km.
~or th~ normal op~-at~ fol~ A'n~J tke calibra-
tion operation, a fixed ti2e delay r of 200 ~8 i~ the
Qxa2ple is then selected i~ order to
~onitor the part of the optical b ~ nrl ~ervice
cable OAI~ (in Pigure 1 and Figur~ 2) ~tuated betweQn the
- 20 OWG line unit ~T (in Figur~ 1 and Fisur~ 2) ~d the
defined passive optical interface PNTl (in Fisure 1 a~d
Figuro 2), in order to 20nitor the o~ ~ca, correctly
in t~r~s of ti2e, of the pseudo-roiae ~inary siglal
reflectad fro2 the passive int~rfac~ PNTl (in Figure 1
and Figure 2) with the aid of the oc _-C8 of a corr~s-
pnrlr~; nrJly high correlator output sig~al a--plitude A, as
it is given in accor-l~c~ with Flsure 3 precisely in the
case of ~ forward and retur~ t~ ma or delay ti2e r o~
200 IL8 in the exa2ple in accorda~ce with a distane~ of
the reflective passive interface PNTl (in P~gur~ 1 a~d
Figura 2) of 20 k2. Sinc~ t_e reflQction condit~o~s
change in the case of ~m int2rruptios: of t_e optical
trans2issioII path, all that is now roquir~d i~ to det2r-
2ine ~nd ~valuato deviations of t_Q correlatio~ ~ig~al
a~plitude fro2 the valu~ es~hl i ~h~d during the cali-
bration operaticn.
A8 may ~o seen fro-- Figurs 3, the ti2e delay r is
exps~ ntly sQlectod for nor~al operation ~uch that it is
at lQast
_ _ . _ , _ _ _ _ .. .. , . ... _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

21 78952
GR 93 P 1855 P - 14 -
approximately equal to the signal propagation time from
the OWG line unit LT up to th- passive optical interface
PNT1 ~in Figur~ 1 ~nd Figure 2) and b~ck, because then
the ~plitude spacing a from the dc - ~ ~nt ucs
(~ndesired correlation signal) of th~ corselator output
aignal is particul~rly large. This dc _ _ ort is to be
5~"rlhe~, on the one hand, to the fact that in a
P~ ~ o ~e the nu~ber of -1 signal ^7~ t~ is not equal
to th- nur~ber of tl signal elelsents and, on the other
hand, that ;n addition to the r~flection signal origi~at-
ing in the passive interfacs PNTl (in Figure 1 and
Figure 2) yQt other signals reach the correlator input.
I~: may he noted in this regard that in Figurs 3 increased
correlation signal amplitudes are also indicat~d in the
le~t-ha d and right-hand edges of the correlatio2 curve,
~d these ~ay be ascribed to reflections at a pA~s;hl~
connector at the LT end. ~owever, this can be neglected
for nitoring the oc~ ~LL~ce of the pseudo-noise binary
signal reflected by the p~asive intQrface PNT1, becau8e
these increased correlation sign~l a~plitudes would occur
o~ly in the cas~ of the associated time delays, to be
seen in Figur~ 3, of, for exa~ple, O or 310 fi8, _ut not
in the case of the o~Te~7~o~ly selected tisle delay of,
~or example, 200 ~8.
If an a~plitude modul~tion of the laser biasing
current should not be te~-h~c~ y rDD~ hle, it is also
poasible for a COL ~ N a nplitude signal to be
superi3lposed additively on t~e electric i3formation
signal, as is indicated in Figurs 2. The total signal
3 0 then dulateQ the optical output power of the la~er .
Ii' an amplitude ~odulation of the laser biasing
current, or if an additive aignal superimposition should
lead to ~rpe~; QQ;hl~ noise levels within the useful
b~ndwidth of the optical signal, it is also posaible in
the OWG line unit LT to add to the drive signal of the
optical trans nitter provided ther~ a pilot audio signal
which has been ~ tod with the pseudo-noise binary
~ignal and whose frequency is outsido the

2 1 78952
GR 93 ~ 1855 P - 15 -
freguency ranse occ~ riecl by the infor~ation aignal to be
transmitted in the upstream directlon; it i~s then necesa-
ary for the carrier-bor~e PN bin~ry aignal 89, ~ -e to be
tfi~d again in th~ receiver section before the
5 correlation
It i8 r,ot a rsstrictio n of the invention that
i~ldividual ~ , OWG line unita (1T ir~ Figure 1 ;~d
Figur~ 2) are respectively provided i~ an exchange in
each case with a~ individual subscriber optical service
10 cablH (OA~ in Figur- 1 and Ficura a); rather, the ir,ven-
tion can al90 bo appli-d i- a passive optical networX ir
w~ich a plurality of subscribers or, in general terr~s, of
df~central t ~l e~ tiona devices are r~spf ctively
cornect~d via a dedicatad optical aervics cable to an
lS optical coupler which is connected directly or via at
leaat one further optical coupler to a commor, OWG line
u~it ~t th- ~cchange end via an optical waveguide bus
S~le~ fro3n the exchange f~nd u~8~. ~ of the
ju~ctions, thf ra is provided in this cas~ a paasive
20 opt~ cal interfac~ PNT1 witk the aid of which it ia
posaible to ~or,itor the optical tr~"f~m; f~f~i~n route fr
the exchange end at least up to this interface; the
st7<tf tf~ ~nade in relatio~ to Figurs 1 (or in the case
of thf~ two- f iber design of Figure 2 ) apply in this ca~;e
in a co.~ "g way

Dessin représentatif
Une figure unique qui représente un dessin illustrant l'invention.
États administratifs

2024-08-01 : Dans le cadre de la transition vers les Brevets de nouvelle génération (BNG), la base de données sur les brevets canadiens (BDBC) contient désormais un Historique d'événement plus détaillé, qui reproduit le Journal des événements de notre nouvelle solution interne.

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Historique d'événement

Description Date
Inactive : CIB expirée 2013-01-01
Le délai pour l'annulation est expiré 1999-12-01
Demande non rétablie avant l'échéance 1999-12-01
Réputée abandonnée - omission de répondre à un avis sur les taxes pour le maintien en état 1998-12-01
Demande publiée (accessible au public) 1995-06-22

Historique d'abandonnement

Date d'abandonnement Raison Date de rétablissement
1998-12-01

Taxes périodiques

Le dernier paiement a été reçu le 1997-11-18

Avis : Si le paiement en totalité n'a pas été reçu au plus tard à la date indiquée, une taxe supplémentaire peut être imposée, soit une des taxes suivantes :

  • taxe de rétablissement ;
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Les taxes sur les brevets sont ajustées au 1er janvier de chaque année. Les montants ci-dessus sont les montants actuels s'ils sont reçus au plus tard le 31 décembre de l'année en cours.
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Historique des taxes

Type de taxes Anniversaire Échéance Date payée
TM (demande, 3e anniv.) - générale 03 1997-12-01 1997-11-18
Titulaires au dossier

Les titulaires actuels et antérieures au dossier sont affichés en ordre alphabétique.

Titulaires actuels au dossier
SIEMENS AKTIENGESELLSCHAFT
Titulaires antérieures au dossier
FROWIN DERR
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Description du
Document 
Date
(aaaa-mm-jj) 
Nombre de pages   Taille de l'image (Ko) 
Description 1995-06-21 17 770
Revendications 1995-06-21 3 79
Abrégé 1995-06-21 1 21
Dessins 1995-06-21 2 24
Dessin représentatif 1999-06-06 1 6
Courtoisie - Lettre d'abandon (taxe de maintien en état) 1998-12-28 1 184
Taxes 1996-11-21 1 76
Rapport d'examen préliminaire international 1996-06-12 29 1 030