Abstract #300300

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JSM 2003 Abstract #300300
Activity Number: 269
Type: Invited
Date/Time: Tuesday, August 5, 2003 : 2:00 PM to 3:50 PM
Sponsor: Technometrics
Abstract - #300300
Title: Interplay between Physics and Statistics for Modeling Optical Fiber Bandwidth
Author(s): Scott A. Vander Wiel*+ and James M. Landwehr and Steven Golowich
Companies: Bell Laboratories and Avaya Labs Research and Bell Laboratories
Address: 700 Mountain Ave. Rm 2C-277, New Providence, NJ, 07974-1208,
Keywords: data analysis ; empirical model ; physical model
Abstract:

In multimode optical fiber, the refractive index of the glass is varied radially in such a way that a light pulse propogates through multiple nodes, or paths, as it travels. We investigate the prediction of fiber transmission capacity, specifically bandwidth, by using refractive index profiles of glass preform rods measured in a manufacturing environment before the rods are drawn into optical fiber. By closely linking empirical and theoretical approaches to modeling, we demonstrate the feasibility of predicting bandwidth despite the finding that profile measurements are grossly inaccurate. Empirical components of the modeling involve extensive preprocessing of raw measurements that approximate continuous functions, followed by spline fitting and specialized cross-validation for model assessment. Modeling from physical theory is based on solutions of Maxwell's equations. This talk discusses how a blending of physics with statistics provides conclusions that could not be obtained separately from either approach--namely, good predictions are possible but profiling equipment needs to be upgraded to remove substantial measurement biases.


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