Attenuation is just a fancy word for loss. In any communications system you've got a certain amount of signal strength going in and a certain amount of signal strength coming out. If there is no amplification in a system there is always going to be loss and the output signal will always be weaker than the input signal.
In fiber systems attenuation is caused by three things:
- Absorption - Glass, whether it is fiber or the windows in your house, will always absorb a small amount of light going through it. The amount depends on the wavelength of light and what the glass is made of.
- Scattering - Atoms in glass cause a certain amount of scattering of light and scattered light will not emerge at the output.
- Leakage - Light will leak out of fiber, especially if the are a lot of bends in the fiber.
One of the primary goals in any communications system is to keep the attenuation to a minimum. Even so, there will always be a loss in signal intensity when comparing output power to input power. Calculating attenuation in a system is pretty simple. Attenuation is cumulative so basically you just add up the signal loss for each component in the system. Here's an example:
Question: A 50 km fiber run has been spec'd at 99% transmission per km. What percentage of light will emerge at the output?
Answer:
The fiber run is transmitting 99% per km so after the first km 99% of the input signal will be available, after the second km, 99% of what's left after the first km will be available, etc. So we can say:
60.5% of the original input signal strength will emerge at the output.
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