Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Submarine branching unit

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A submarine branching unit is a piece of equipment used in submarine telecommunications cable systems to allow the cable to split to serve more than one destination. For example, one branch might head for a cable landing point and others may continue.

There are several methods by which the split can be effected, which can also depend on the type of cable system:

  • Purely electrical systems (now almost obsolete) can be split by either:
  • Physically separating the signal cables so some go in one direction and some in another, which requires no additional power.
  • Using an add-drop multiplexer to direct the signals down one path or the other. The electrical equipment that acts as the add-drop multiplexer will need powering.
  • Optical fibre cable systems can be split by either:
  • Physically separating the signal-carrying fibres so some go in one direction and some in another, which requires no additional power.
  • Converting the optically carried signals to electrical signals, using an add-drop multiplexer to divide and recombine the signals on the desired paths, the reconverting back to optically carried signals. This signal conversion and multiplexing equipment will require power.
  • Using a reconfigurable optical add-drop multiplexer to direct optical carrier frequencies down desired paths. The power requirements of optical multiplexing in this manner will be lower than the previous method.
  • In both types of cable system, more than one technique can be used simultaneously.

    The conventional symbol used for a submarine branching unit in maps of cable routes is a small equilateral triangle with (usually) one vertex pointing towards the top of the map.

    References

    Submarine branching unit Wikipedia