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All-optical networking is generally believed to be the only
solution for coping with the ever-increasing demands in bandwidth,
such as the World Wide Web application.
Optical backbone networks efficiently achieve a high level of
traffic aggregation by multiplexing numerous users on
circuit-switched wavelength paths - the so-called wavelength
routing approach. In contrast, the reduced level of traffic
aggregation in access and metro networks makes wavelength routing
solutions not adequate. In these network areas, packet-interleaved
optical time-division multiplexing with its finer and more dynamic
bandwidth allocation is advocated.
The book presents such an approach, known as photonic slot routing.
It illustrates how this approach may provide a cost-effective
solution to deploying all-optical transport networks, using today's
optical device technology. To that end, the author combines
DWDM-technology with fixed slot optical switching, and gives a
comprehensive description of this approach in which slots are
aligned across the wavelengths to form groups of data-flows that
propagate as a whole inside the network. Operating algorithms are
developed, and network performance is analyzed, both by means of
theoretical analysis and many simulations of sample networks.
This work will be of particular interest to researchers and
professionals who are active in photonic networking.
All-optical networking is generally believed to be the only
solution for coping with the ever-increasing demands in bandwidth,
such as the World Wide Web application. Optical backbone networks
efficiently achieve a high level of traffic aggregation by
multiplexing numerous users on circuit-switched wavelength paths -
the so-called wavelength routing approach. In contrast, the reduced
level of traffic aggregation in access and metro networks makes
wavelength routing solutions not adequate. In these network areas,
packet-interleaved optical time-division multiplexing with its
finer and more dynamic bandwidth allocation is advocated. The book
presents such an approach, known as photonic slot routing. It
illustrates how this approach may provide a cost-effective solution
to deploying all-optical transport networks, using today's optical
device technology. To that end, the author combines DWDM-technology
with fixed slot optical switching, and gives a comprehensive
description of this approach in which slots are aligned across the
wavelengths to form groups of data-flows that propagate as a whole
inside the network. Operating algorithms are developed, and network
performance is analyzed, both by means of theoretical analysis and
many simulations of sample networks. This work will be of
particular interest to researchers and professionals who are active
in photonic networking.
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