Broadcast-and-Select
Networks
Broadcast-and-select networks are based on a passive star coupler
device connected to several stations in a star topology. This device
is a piece of glass that splits the signal it receives on any of its
ports to all the ports. As a result it offers an optical equivalent
of radio systems: each transmitter broadcasts its signal on a
different wavelength, and the receivers can tune to receive the
desired signal (see Fig. 5 for a schematic drawing of such a
system).
Figure 5 - A
broadcast-and-select system.
The main
networking challenge in such networks pertains to the coordination
of a pair of stations in order to agree and tune their systems to
transmit and receive on the same wavelength. One design issue that
must be determined before deciding on these protocols is the
tuneable part of the system. It is possible to either have the
transmitters each fixed on a different wavelength and have tuneable
receivers, have fixed receivers and tuneable transmitters, or have
tuning abilities in both components. It has been shown that it is
more advantageous to have tuneable receivers and fixed transmitters
than the other way around. The advantage of these networks is in
their simplicity and natural multicasting capability. However, they
have severe limitations since they do not enable reuse of
wavelengths and are thus not scalable beyond the number of supported
wavelengths.
Another factor
that hinders the scalability of this solution and disables it from
spanning long distances is the splitting of the transmitted energy
to all the ports. For these reasons the main application for
broadcast-and-select is high-speed local and metropolitan area
networks. However, the relatively high costs of WDM transmitters and
receivers compared to the low costs of other technologies (e.g., ATM
and switched Ethernet) do not enable broadcast-and-select networks
to be competitive in this arena currently. Due to these reasons we
will ignore broadcast-and-select networks for the rest of the
discussion.
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