Abstract
AbstractWide-scale sensing of natural and human-made events is critical for protecting against environmental disasters and reducing the monetary losses associated with telecommunication service downtime. However, achieving dense sensing coverage is difficult, given the high deployment overhead of modern sensor networks. Here we offer an in-depth exploration of state-of-polarization sensing over fiber-optic networks using unmodified optical transceivers to establish a strong correlation with ground truth distributed acoustic sensing. To validate our sensing methodology, we collect 85 days of polarization and distributed acoustic sensing measurements along two colocated, 50 km fiber-optic cables in Southern California. We then examine how polarization sensing can improve network reliability by accurately modeling overall network health and preemptively detecting traffic loss. Finally, we explore the feasibility of wide-scale seismic monitoring with polarization sensing, showcasing the polarization perturbations following low-intensity earthquakes and the potential to more than double seismic monitoring coverage in Southern California alone.
Funder
National Science Foundation
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Reference80 articles.
1. Schulte, A. Fiber broadband enters largest investment cycle ever. https://fiberbroadband.org/2022/01/05/fiber-broadband-enters-largest-investment-cycle-ever/ (2022).
2. Strobel, O. & Lubkoll, J. Fiber-optic communication—an overview. In 2010 20th International Crimean Conference “Microwave & Telecommunication Technology”, 16–20 (2010).
3. Kareem, F. Q. et al. A survey of optical fiber communications: challenges and processing time influences. Asian J. Res. Comput. Sci. 7, 48–58 (2021).
4. Lu, P. et al. Distributed optical fiber sensing: review and perspective. Appl. Phys. Rev. 6, 041302 (2019).
5. Pendão, C. & Silva, I. Optical fiber sensors and sensing networks: overview of the main principles and applications. Sensors 22, 7554 (2022).