We.3.A.1
ECOC 2008, 21-25 September 2008, Brussels, Belgium
TUTORIAL The future of optical networks Ken-ichi Sato Nagoya University; Furo-Cho, Chikusa-Ku, Nagoya, 464-8603 JAPAN
[email protected] Abstract The transport network paradigm is moving toward NGN (Next Generations Networks) which aims at IP convergence, while architectures and technologies are diversifying. Video technologies including ultra-highdefinition TV (more than 33M pixels) continue to advance and future communication networks will become videocentric. The inefficiencies of current IP technologies, in particular the energy consumption and throughput limitations of IP routers, will become pressing problems. Harnessing the full power of light will resolve these problems and spur the creation of future video-centric networks. Extension of optical layer technologies and coordination with new transport protocols will be critical, and are discussed in detail.
Ken-ichi Sato Ken-ichi Sato is currently a professor at the graduate school of Engineering, Nagoya University. Before joining the university in April 2004, he was an executive manager of the Photonic Transport Network Laboratory at NTT. His R&D activities cover future transport network architectures, network design, OA&M (operation administration and maintenance) systems, photonic network systems including optical cross-connect/ADM and photonic IP routers, and optical transmission technologies. He has authored/co-authored more than 200 research publications in international journals and conferences and fourteen books. He holds 35 granted patents and more than 100 pending patents. He is an NTT R&D Fellow, a Fellow of the IEICE of JAPAN, and a Fellow of the IEEE.
978-1-4244-2229-6/08/$25.00 ©2008 IEEE
Vol. 6 - 93
ECOC 2008, 21-25 September 2008, Brussels, Belgium
We.3.A.1
Extended Abstract Until ten years ago, we looked at N-ISDN and SONET/SDH as the next step technologies on which to base the development of access and core networks, respectively; agreement was universal. The next step, IP convergence, is supported by the advent and penetration of IP, new technical developments including WDM and photonic network technologies, rapid advances in access technologies, and the emergence of IP-based control protocols such as MPLS and GMPLS; all provide powerful tools for creating the next generation networks. While IP convergence is well recognized among carriers and vendors, the key issues that they must consider include the divergence of architectures and technologies. The technology alternatives are extremely varied and this allows us to develop optimized networks that match each country's or region's and/or carrier's situation. Broadband access including ADSL and FTTH is now being rapidly adopted throughout the world and, as a result, traffic is continually increasing; around 50 % every year in North America and Japan. The number of FTTH subscribers exceeded ten million in Japan and two million in USA in 2007. In order to cope with the traffic increase, optical transmission and node technologies are being extensively developed. The maximum number of WDM wavelengths per fiber exceeds one hundred, and WDM transmission systems with a channel speed of 40 Gb/s are now being introduced in some countries. The key enabling technology that enhances node throughput while simultaneously reducing node cost, is the optical path technology that exploits wavelength routing. Wavelength routing using ROADMs has recently been introduced, and a large scale deployment is being conducted in North America and Japan. GMPLS controlled OXCs (Optical Cross-connects) have also been used to create nation-wide testbed networks. Video technologies including IP TV and high-definition and ultra-high-definition TV (more than 33M pixels) are advancing and further traffic expansion is expected in the near future. Future communication networks will become video-centric. Recent advances in video technologies, which include three-dimensional TV, are described. Cutting-edge applications including e-science, all of which need enormous bandwidth, have also been conceived. The inefficiencies of the TCP/IP protocol will become more and more tangible. The power consumption and throughput limitations of IP routers are expected to limit the scale of Internet expansion in terms of bandwidth and the number of users, and the approach of using only IP convergence will not be the best to creating future bandwidth abundant networks. The details, including the limits of IP routers and protocol bottleneck, are discussed from various viewpoints. One important direction that can resolve these problems is the enhancement of photonic networking technologies. In future networks the number of wavelength paths and hence optical node throughput must be greatly increased. The enhancement of optical path capabilities and the introduction of new protocols including fast optical circuit switching will play key roles. In realizing the networks needed, wavebands (bundles of optical paths) and hierarchical optical path cross-connects (HOXCs) will become basic technologies. The presentation will elucidate the merits and issues of introducing higher order optical paths. The introduction of wavebands will substantially reduce optical switch size at cross-connects, which mitigates one of the major barriers to the implementation of large throughput optical cross-connect systems. One of the obstacles, network design complexity, will be shown to be effectively resolved by a new optical path network design that introduces a traffic demand expression in a Cartesian product space. Some of the key component technologies of the HOXCs, a new waveband MUX/DEMUX, and a waveband selective switch (WBSS) have been developed. The hierarchical optical path network will be implemented in the not so distant future when traffic volumes warrant it.
Vol. 6 - 94
978-1-4244-2229-6/08/$25.00 ©2008 IEEE
6.3
32
1.5
100
6.3
45
45N
Europe
2
8
34
139
IP/MPLS Ethernet NG-SONET/SDH Photonic WDM
FTTH Cable Wireless DSL Satellite
and Divergence of Architectures & Technologies
Extensive choices made available through recent rapid technical advancements.
Death of the monopolies and enhanced competition that strongly drives the optimization of architectures and technologies according to the different physical/geographical and regulatory situations.
N-ISDN
SONET/SDH FR, ATM
The technology alternatives are extremely varied and this allows us to develop optimized networks that match each country's or region's or carrier's situation.
N-ISDN and SONET/SDH were recognized universally as the next step technologies on which to base the development of access and core networks.
IP Convergence,
2005
1995
Universal Standard
Analog (huge number of variations)
Japan NA
Access
Metro
Core
400
PDH
1985
c Copyright 2008, Nagoya University
Nagoya University
[email protected]
Ken-ichi Sato
September 24, 2008 ECOC 2008, Tutorial
The Future of Optical Networks
IP/MPLS Ethernet NG-SONET/SDH Photonic WDM Wireless Cable FTTH Access DSL Satellite
Metro
Core
Hub Office
Local Office Ether Sw Router VoIP Router Router ADM
ADM ADM ATM Switch Remote DSLAM Router
WDM PON EPON GPON/BPON
FTTH Single Star (Media Converter) Double Star Active Star (Ether Switch) Passive Star (PON)
Access
ADM/DXC Router
ATM Centric Architecture
ADM/DXC ADM/DXC MPLS Router Router
SDH Centric Architecture
MPLS Router
IP Centric Architecture
Core Office
Metro
DXC-based mesh or concatenated ring architectures
Integrated or separated NW approach for provisioning of legacy(voice/data) and internet services.
Core
Divergence of Architectures & Technologies
2005
c Copyright 2008, Nagoya university
6. Conclusions
Recent technical advances allow us to utilize a different set of network element. However, in order to strengthen the scalability, manageability, and costeffectiveness, new technologies are required.
Transfer Mode/Protocol Transparency Wavelength routing with OXC/ROADM(Linear/Ring) Enhanced Transparency in Electrical Level: OTN (G.709/Digital Wrapper) STM-N, 10GbEther, GbEther SDH/SONET Extensions: NG-SDH/ SONET (GFP, VCAT, LCAS) 10/100BaseT, 100BaseFX and GbEther with RPR, etc. Convergent Packet Platform MPLS-TP (formerly T-MPLS) VLAN Cross-Connect Provider Backbone Transport (Mac-in-Mac tunneling) Programmable Transport Line Module STM-1/OC-3, STM-4/OC-12, STM-16/OC-48, GbEther, Fiber Channel, FastEther, ESCON, etc.
Transport
ASON/GMPLS Automated Connection Provisioning
Next Generation Network Fixed Mobile Convergence Using 3GPP IMS and SIP
Control/Architecture
2015 Integration Technologies
5. Hierarchical Optical Path Networks and Technologies
4. Bottleneck of Present IP-based Technologies Posed to Future Networks
3. Advances in video Technologies
2. Access Network Development
1. Overview of Transport Network Evolution
Outline
ECOC 2008, 21-25 September 2008, Brussels, Belgium
We.3.A.1
Vol. 6 - 95
Headend CMTS / QAM
HFC
0
10
20
1.5 M type (2000.12-)
8 M type (2001.12-)
12 M type (2002.11-)
24 M type (2003.7-)
40 M type (2003.12-)
47 M type (2004.8-)
30
Source: Cisco
40
50
60
70
Vol. 6 - 96
c Copyright 2008, Nagoya university
Source: M. Ninomiya, presented at BWFA, 2005
Transmission Loss between User’s House and Service Provider’s Office (dB)
4
8
12
16
20
24
28
32
36
40
44
48
Down-Stream Bit Rate of High-Speed ADSL
c Copyright 2008, Nagoya university
6. Conclusions
ADSL
ONU (6 - 12 HH)
Fiber node (500 - 1500 HH)
500ft
Coax (6MHz DS channels, N*6MHz in future)
Cable Modem + set-top + home GW
Today ~700- 800 MHz DS / ~40 MHz US In the future ~900MHz DS / ~80MHz US
Fiber Node (50 HH)
ONT + set-top + home GW
DSL modem + set-top + home GW
DSL modem + set-top + home GW
DSL modem
Customer Premise
VDSL2 ADSL2+
ADSL2+ / VDSL2
Up to 5000 feet of copper
BPON / GPON + optional RF overlay
DSLAM (100s HH)
Up to 12000 feet of copper
Curb
0
1000
2000
3000
4000
5000
Cumulative Percentage of Users against Loop Length 100 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 6000 7000
Loop Length between Subscriber and SP Building (m)
c Copyright 2008, Nagoya university
" ! """
0
5
10
15
20
25
Mb/s
Measured Downstream Speed for 26 Mb/s ADSL
c Copyright 2008, Nagoya university
Copper
Node (Neighborhood)
Passive optical splitters / combiners in outside plant
Aggregation
DSLAM or DSL from DLC
RT
DLC: Digital Loop Carrier, DSLAM: Digital Subscriber Line Access Multiplexer, RT: Remote Terminal, VDSL: Very high data rate Digital Subscriber Line, GW: Gate Way, OLT: Optical Line Termination, ONT: Optical Network Terminal, ONU: Optical Network Unit, HFC: Hybrid Fiber-Coaxial
OLT
FTTH
5. Hierarchical Optical Path Networks and Technologies
Down-Stream Bit Rate on Ideal Condition (Mbps)
Fiber
Aggregation
FTTC
4. Bottleneck of Present IP-based Technologies Posed to Future Networks
Measured Downstream Speed
3. Advances in video Technologies
Aggregation
Current telco DSLAM / ATM aggregation broadband
CO
Access Architecture in USA
FTTN
2. Access Network Development
1. Overview of Transport Network Evolution
Outline
ECOC 2008, 21-25 September 2008, Brussels, Belgium
We.3.A.1
Ratio (%)
c Copyright 2008, Nagoya university
20-25
10-15
4-10
2-4
1-2
0-1
Measured Downstream Speed Mbps
15-20
11
Number of FTTH Subscribers in the World
c Copyright 2008, Nagoya university
Source: Acca Networks
Measured Downstream Speed Mbps
0
50
75
25
Cumulative (%)
100
#!"
FTTx
will be Needed
"""!
Population Density'(/km2)
$
$
10
Vol. 6 - 97
T. Yamada, FOE 2006, 2006.
c Copyright 2008, Nagoya university
0
0
0.5
0.1
1.5
2
1
Fiscal Year
Start of BFlet’s Service
0.2
0.3
0.4
2.5
NTT East
12
All Areas Urban Areas with more than 100,000 Inhabitants
NTT West
Fiscal Year
Start of BFlet’s Service
Source: NTT West Data Book
20
40
60
80
100
Investment in Optical Access Network Development and Opticalization to the Distribution Point by NTT
"%
%
#"
"
$"&
Cheaper FTTx Deployment Cost
Source: ITIF (The Information & Innovation Foundation), May 2008.
be Applied
xDSL may
c Copyright 2008, Nagoya university
Investment (Trillion Yen)
Average Local Loop Length'(Km)
Average Loop Length and Population Density
Cumulative Investment (Trillion Yen)
978-1-4244-2229-6/08/$25.00 ©2008 IEEE Fiber Installation Ratio (%)
Distribution of Downstream Speed for 26 Mb/s ADSL (10,000 data)
ECOC 2008, 21-25 September 2008, Brussels, Belgium
We.3.A.1
30
2003.3
2005.3
All SPs NTT East + NTT West
USA(Pass)
USA
Japan
Vol. 6 - 98
c Copyright 2008, Nagoya university
Source: MIC, Japan and FTTH Council
10
100
1,000
10,000
Year
2007.3
8.77
12.2
2009.3
2011.3
as of April 2008
2.9 mil
11.8 mil
12.2 mil
Target Reset on Nov. 11, 2007
Number of FTTH Subscribers
c Copyright 2008, Nagoya university
Source: M. Ii, OFC/NFOEC 2006, March, 2006
0
10
20
FTTH Subscribers (million)
Number of Subscribers(thousand)
Target Set on Nov. 8, 2004
Number of NTT's FTTH Subscribers toward 20 Million
2007
2008
2009
2010
c Copyright 2008, Nagoya university
2011
NTT
Situation varies in each country Four countries make up more than 80 %
Strong public support. City- or Municipality-wide optical networks. Private initiative. FastWeb. Power utility company, Hafslund (Oslo municipality owns the dominant share.) Very high population density. Competition between cable pushes higher speed service. Electrical power company plays a dominant role.
50,000 100,000 150,000 200,000 250,000 300,000 350,000
FTTH Subscribers, End 2007 0
Source: FTTH-Council Europe/IDATE 2008
Czech Republic
Poland
Slovenia
Finland
France
Denmark
Netherland
Norway
Italy
Sweden
2006
NTT
Forecast Household Pass Forecast Homes Connected
FTTH in Europe
2005
c Copyright 2008, Nagoya university
Source: IGI, 2007
0
2,000,000
4,000,000
6,000,000
8,000,000
10,000,000
12,000,000
14,000,000
16,000,000
16,000,000
20,000,000
Number of Verizon's FTTH Subscribers
ECOC 2008, 21-25 September 2008, Brussels, Belgium
We.3.A.1
978-1-4244-2229-6/08/$25.00 ©2008 IEEE
Vol. 6 - 99
c Copyright 2008, Nagoya university
6. Conclusions
5. Hierarchical Optical Path Networks and Technologies
4. Bottleneck of Present IP-based Technologies Posed to Future Networks
3. Advances in video Technologies
2. Access Network Development
1. Overview of Transport Network Evolution
Outline
Source: The Broadband Fact Book, Internet Innovation Alliance
c Copyright 2008, Nagoya university
1.4
1.6
1.8
2.0
2.2
Annual Growth
Internet Traffic Growth as Seen by AT&T
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
c Copyright 2008, Nagoya university
# !% $ $!
% $ $!!"
% $ $!
$
"
% $ $!
HDTV-1080p/24 vs. 4K-SHD Digital Cinema with 8M pixels vs. Super Hi-Vision (EHRI-3) with 32M pixels
Total Broadband Subscriber Traffic of 6 ISPs Exchanged Peak Traffic among all ISPs at Major IXs Exchanged Traffic among all ISPs at Major IXs Exchanged Traffic among 6 ISPs at Major IXs
Total Traffic Downloaded by Broadband Users in Japan
1.4 times increase per year
Resolution comparison
c Copyright 2008, Nagoya university
Source: Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications
1997
Monthly average of daily average traffic (Gb/s)
Internet Traffic Growth in Japan
ECOC 2008, 21-25 September 2008, Brussels, Belgium
We.3.A.1
EHRI-0
3840x2160
EHRI-1 5760x3240
EHRI-2
Vol. 6 - 100
30 40 50
100
Level 3 (720P)
200
Level 1 (2kP)
300 400 500
Level 2 (1080P)
Screen Size (Inch)
Level 4 (480P)
5: Very Good 4: Good 3: Fair 2: Poor 1: Very Poor
c Copyright 2008, Nagoya university
1
2
3
4
5
MOS
Screen Size and Available Quality
c Copyright 2008, Nagoya university
23
7680x4320
EHRI-3
Courtesy of Dr. Yoshihiro Fujita, Presented at NAB2006 Broadcast Engineering Conference
• Cable transmission of LSDI
ITU-T SG9
No. of Pixels 1920x1080
Hierarchies
• LSDI : Large Screen Digital Imagery, TG6/9 – Draft New Recommendation ‘Parameter values for an expanded hierarchy of LSDI image formats for production and international programe exchange’ • EHRI: Extremely High-Resolution Imagery, WP6J • Multi-channel sound system for LSDI, TG6/9
ITU-R SG6
Standardization in ITU
0
1000
2000
3000
4000
Polaroid film
35mm film
Printing Medicine Laser Printer 60mm film
0
Still Images
HDT V108 0P 720P
35mm Movie
60 Temporal resolution (Frame or Field/sec)22
c Copyright 2008, Nagoya university
150 PDP presented at 2008 International CES Expected to be commercially available in 2009
2006, 102 inch, Samsung and LG 2007, 103-inch plasma TV, Panasonic (commercially available) 2007, 108-inch LCD TV, Sharp (commercially available) 2007, 110-inch Projection TV, Victor (commercially available) 2008, 150-inch plasma TV, Panasonic (presented at 2008 CES, expected to be available in 2008)
Large Screen TV, 100 is already available, 150 has already been presented
Screen Size is Getting Bigger
24
Standard TV(480i)
1.5 Gbps
HDTV(1080i)
72 Gbps (24 Gbps; tentative)
Super Hi-Vision (4,320p)
Television
Legacy media
6 Gbps
4k Digital Cinema with 8M4096x2160 pixels
Motion Picture
Horizontal resolution is used for motion pictures. 4k motion picture means= 2000 scanning lines 2k motion picture means = 1000 scanning lines (@HDTV)
2K
4K
8K
Spatial resolution lines
Comparison of Resolution
ECOC 2008, 21-25 September 2008, Brussels, Belgium
We.3.A.1
32"
26"
37"
40-43" 37"
LCD Plasma Panel
50"
-20 ~ -30%/year
year
40"
Vol. 6 - 101
0.4 M
c Copyright 2008, Nagoya university
MPEG-2
Original
2.1 M
HDTV
Original
8.8 M
4k Cinema
8k Super Hi-Vision 33.2 M
JPEG2000
Original
MPEG-4 (H.264) MPEG-2 MPEG-4 (H.264)
Original
Standard TV
Spatial Resolution (pixel/frame)
1M
10M
100M
1G
10G
100G
Bit Rate of Different Video Format
c Copyright 2008, Nagoya university
Bit Rate (bit/s)
978-1-4244-2229-6/08/$25.00 ©2008 IEEE
White Paper, Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications, 2007
$
Price Trend of LCD and Plasma Panel for High Definition TV (in Japan)
36.0
40.2
23.8
c Copyright 2008, Nagoya university
http://www.dlp.com/cinema/ http://www.christiedigital.com/AMEN/EntertainmentSolutions/DigitallyReleasedMovies/ http://www.aboutprojectors.com/Sony-SRX-R220-projector.html http://www.ntt-west.co.jp/news/0703/070316a_1.html
Trial presentation started in October 2005 in Japan. Twelve films have been shown in Japan at six theatres as of May 2007.
4K Cinema (40962160)
About 400 theatres have adopted DLP Cinema as of December 2005. That number now exceeds 3,000. The adoption rate should rise; 5,000 of the 100 thousand screens around the world are renewed every year.
28
Christie CP2000 WORLD'S MOST DEPLOYED DIGITAL CINEMA PROJECTOR
DLP Cinema developed by TIBarco, Christie, and NEC are now licensed
SONY "4K" DIGITAL CINEMA PROJECTOR, SRX-R220, • 4096 x 2160 pixel resolution • 18000 ANSI Lumens • 2000:1 Contrast Ratio
36.8
35.8
27.4
The first film presented by 2K Cinema was "Star Wars Episode I" directed by George Lucas, shown in June 1999 in USA. Digital Cinema Projector System that uses DLP (Digital Light Processing) Cinema developed by TI. More than 190 movies have been shot using DLP Cinema.
2K Cinema (20481080)
Digital Cinema
Source: Japan Electronics and Information Technology Industries Association
40.4
42.3
17.3
c Copyright 2008, Nagoya university
Shipping of LC-TV (16:9) in Japan
Screen Size of TV (Japan)
ECOC 2008, 21-25 September 2008, Brussels, Belgium
We.3.A.1
Distribution Center
Theater
NTT
Itabashi MusashiMurayama
Theater
NTT
(NTT East)
Roppongi Encryption, Compression, Odaiba
Film Studio
Film Studio
Burbank
USA
! 01/*&$3/1 -"+& )3 0/22)#,& 3/ 1&",)9& )32 &731&-&,8 ()'( 7 0)7&,2 1&2/,43)/. 6()$( )2 23)04,"3&% #8 3(& )')3", ).&-" .)3)"3)5&2 29
Digital Cinema Server
MPEG-2
Original
0.4 M
2.1 M
HDTV
Original
8.8 M
4k Cinema
8k Super Hi-Vision 33.2 M
JPEG2000
Original
MPEG-4 (H.264) MPEG-2 MPEG-4 (H.264)
Original
Standard TV
Spatial Resolution (pixel/frame)
1M
10M
100M
1G
10G
100G
Bit Rate of Different Video Format
c Copyright 2008, Nagoya university
Film Studio
Film Studio
1 Gbps
Los Angels
Seattle
Color Control, Key Control,
Quality Control
Theater
http://www.ntt-west.co.jp/news/0703/070316a_2.html http://www.watch.impress.co.jp/av/docs/20061025/sony.htm http://www.sony.jp/CorporateCruise/Press/200704/07-0425/
Bit Rate (bit/s)
1 Gbps
Yokosuka
Distribution Distribution Center Center
Tokyo
(NTT West)
Tkatsuki Nanba
Key Distribution
Key Center
Osaka
Tokyo Japan 200 Mbps
Trial System Configuration of 4K Pure Cinema Distribution
1960
1970
1980
1990
Penetration of TV Households
2010
2020
15 years to reach 80% penetration
HD enabled TV sets
4K TV 8K TV
半球状 Hemispherical Screen スクリーン
150mm 150mm
視線高調整台 視線高調整台
Observer 観 察観 者察 者
広視野画像投影系 Wide Vision 850mm 広視野画像投影系 850mm Projection System
Courtesy of Dr. Yoshihiro Fujita, Presented at the 11th Optical Technology Symposium, March 4, 2008, AIST, Tokyo.
Measurement of Body Inclination (movement of Center of Gravity)
Tilt still picture
Measurement of Psychologically Induced Effect Using Hemispherical Screen
Sight Angle and Degree of Psychological Effect (Induced Effects)
c Copyright 2008, Nagoya university
2000
Colour TV
Source: P. Revillon, European HDTV Conference, Luxemburg, 2005
0% 1950
80% penetration
21 years to reach 80% penetration
Black & White TV
10% 25 years to reach
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
90%
100%
The Third Generation of TV Sets in Europe will be Flat and HD
ECOC 2008, 21-25 September 2008, Brussels, Belgium
We.3.A.1
Vol. 6 - 102
Hi-Vision
978-1-4244-2229-6/08/$25.00 ©2008 IEEE
*
*
1980
*
*
1990
*
*
*
2000
1990
Expo (2005)
Broadcast format (2008)
*
2010 2020
(2020)
SHV broadcast * (2025) * First exhibit * broadcast Experimental (2002) (2015) Demo.*at Aichi Home-use* AV machinery
Study start (1995)
*
2000
Experimental broadcast Study start (1989) PDP practical model (1964) First exhibit (1996) (1969) Satellite digital broadcast (2000) Broadcast format 1125lines (1976) Terrestrial digital broadcast Demo. at Tsukuba (2003) Expo (1985)
*
1970
Vol. 6 - 103
UHDTV
SMPTE 2036
16:9
16:9
Aspect ratio
3840x2160
7680x4320
3840x2160
7680x4320
Pixel count
50,60*
24*,25,30*, 50,60*
Frame frequency
Sampling Bit depth
Rec.709
Rec.1361
Colorimetry
*divided by 1.001 are also specified
4:4:4, 10, 12 4:2:2, 4:2:0
4:4:4, 10, 12 4:2:2, 4:2:0
structure
Courtesy of Dr. Yoshihiro Fujita, Presented at the 11th Optical Technology Symposium, March 4, 2008, AIST, Tokyo.
Expanded LSDI
Application
ITU Rec. 1769
Standard
Ultra high definition television – Image parameter values for program production
SMPTE 2036 (2007)
Parameter values for an expanded hierarchy of LSDI image formats for production and international programm exchange
ITU-R Recommendation BT.1769 (2006)
Tiered image formats based on 1920x1080
Extremely high resolution imagery
ITU-R Recommendation BT.1201 (1995-2004)
Standardization of UHDTV
Courtesy of Dr. Yoshihiro Fujita, Presented at NAB2006 Broadcast Engineering Conference
Super Hi-Vision
Road Map of Super Hi-Vision
Free Viewpoint TV
Courtesy of Dr. Yoshihiro Fujita, Presented at the 11th Optical Technology Symposium, March 4, 2008, AIST, Tokyo.
2.5" 33M-pixel CMOS imager
・Between camera and CCU: Optical wavelength multiple in one HD camera cable, 1,000 m ・Weight of head: 40 kg, Power consumption: 150 W
・5x power zoom lens
・1.25" 8M-pixel CMOS, Four-chip imaging
・Weight of head: 80 kg, Power consumption: 600 W
・Between camera and CCU: HD-SDI (optical, coaxial) x 16, 300 m
・50 mm single-focus lens
c Copyright 2008, Nagoya university
36
Ref. Masayuki Tanimoto, "FTV (Free viewpoint TV) and Creation of Ray-Based Image Engineering", ECTI Transaction on Electrical Engineering, Electronics and Communications, Vol. 6, No. 1, pp.3-14, February 2008.
2.5" 8M-pixel CCD, Four-chip imaging
ECOC 2008, 21-25 September 2008, Brussels, Belgium
We.3.A.1
Vol. 6 - 104
c Copyright 2008, Nagoya university
39
Prof. Masayuki Tanimoto, Nagoya University, Japan,
[email protected]
2008/07FDIS (Final Draft International Standard) of MVC issued and MVC finalized
2008/05Test sequences for 3DV determined
2008/013DV (3D Video) that targets 3D display application of FTV started as the first focus of FTV
2007/04: MPEG FTV started for standardization of entire FTV
2006/07: Activity moves from MPEG to JVT
2006/01: Proposals evaluated
2005/07: Call for Proposals on MVC issued
2005/04: Test sequences for MVC determined
2005/01: Start of MVC decided for compression of FTV
2004/10: Call for Evidence on MVC (Multi-View Video Coding) issued
2004/03: FTV got strong support from industry in response to the call
2003/10: Call for Comments on 3DAV issued
2002/07: FTV proposed to MPEG 3DAV
FTV Standardization Activity
c Copyright 2008, Nagoya university
37
captured scene
Prof. Masayuki Tanimoto, Nagoya University, Japan,
[email protected]
Circular alignment of 100 HDTV cameras
100-Camera Capture System of FTV
Outline
c Copyright 2008, Nagoya university
6. Conclusions
5. Hierarchical Optical Path Networks and Technologies
4. Bottleneck of Present IP-based Technologies Posed to Future Networks
3. Advances in video Technologies
2. Access Network Development
1. Overview of Transport Network Evolution
c Copyright 2008, Nagoya university
Prof. Masayuki Tanimoto, Nagoya University, Japan,
[email protected]
38
Ray Reproducing 360-Degree Display: The SeeLinder
ECOC 2008, 21-25 September 2008, Brussels, Belgium
We.3.A.1
978-1-4244-2229-6/08/$25.00 ©2008 IEEE Ethernet FR ATM PPP FDDI OTN SDH Satellite Wireless Coax Fiber Pair Cable
IP
TELNET SMTP SNMP POP FTP HTTP TCP UDP
DNS
Fiscal Year (end of March)
Vol. 6 - 105
c Copyright 2008, Nagoya university
Source: Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications, Japan, March 2007.
108 kWh/year
4.8 %
% of total electricity sold in Japan
Carrier (Fixed)
User Communication Terminal(Fixed)
Carrier (Mobile)
PC (Business)
Server (Middle Range)
Router
Hub
5.8 %
Prediction of Electricity Consumption on IT (Japan)
c Copyright 2008, Nagoya university
Throughput Bottleneck of IP Transport
Energy Bottleneck of Internet
Bottleneck of TCP/IP-based Internet
2000
2005
2010
10 TWh
Fiscal Year
Target for Reduction
5 %
100 GW
1 Mbps
c Copyright 2008, Nagoya university
World Population: 6 Billion Broadband Access Take Rate: 33 %
Percent of World Power Supply
Power Consumption
Access Rate
58 %
1 TW
10 Mbps
The energy bottleneck could eventually limit network growth.
Power Consumption will Limit Internet Growth
c Copyright 2008, Nagoya university
Source: NTT West
Power Dissipation by NTT Group in Fiscal Year 2003 was 7.4 Tera Wh, One Percent of the Total Electrical Power Purchased in Japan.
1990
3.4 TWh
Electrical Power Purchased by NTT Group
Consumption of Electricity by Telecommunication Carriers is Rapidly Increasing
ECOC 2008, 21-25 September 2008, Brussels, Belgium
We.3.A.1
¥ 100,000,000 ¥ 150,000,000
Vol. 6 - 106
1
0.1 W
c Copyright 2008, Nagoya university
2
0.5 W
1W
10 W
10 Device Cost
5W
20 W
100
( Yen ) ($)
Device Cost Dominant
47
Electricity Cost Dominant
Device Lifetime = 5 years Total Power = 2.2 x Device Power Consumption Electricity Charge = 24 yen/kWh
Device Cost and Lifetime Electricity Cost
c Copyright 2008, Nagoya university
Source: HP Homepage
Power consumption: 1 kW Electricity charge:¥ 25,000/kVA/Month (including air conditioning)
DLS380 G5/2CPU (maximum configuration) Retail Price ¥ 525,000 Electricity charge ¥ 600,000 (2 years)
Floor rental fee: ¥ 12,000/m2 /year x 700 m2 (in downtown area, it's more expensive) Electricity price: ¥ 25,000/kVA/Month (including air conditioning) (number of racks: 250, number of servers: 550)
Floor rental fee/year Electricity charge/year
0.5
0.25 1
1 0 46
Flets-ISDN Flets-ADSL 64 kbps 12 Mbps Copper
c Copyright 2008, Nagoya university
Source: NTT Group CSR Report 2005
0
25
50
75
100
125
B-Flets 100 Mbps Fiber (FTTH)
0.1
1
10
100
1000
10000
48
Application of Optical Technologies Contribute to Lowering Energy Used not only for Core/Metro Networking but also for Access Networking
Access Technology and Environmental Load
c Copyright 2008, Nagoya university
2.23
0.53
Device
Package
PSU Efficiency
Equipment
Room Cooling System Power Supply Efficiency UPS+PDU Blowers
Center
Power Consumption of Each Device will more than DOUBLE.
Environmental Load (kg-CO2)
In running dater center, electricity charge exceeds floor rental fee or equipment price. Significant part of the ownership cost is now electricity cost.
Normalized Ownership Cost (Total cost/Device Cost)
Device Power Consumption will Multiply
Environmental Efficiency (kbps/kg-CO2)
Ownership Cost is Changing from Hardware to Electricity Cost
ECOC 2008, 21-25 September 2008, Brussels, Belgium
We.3.A.1
978-1-4244-2229-6/08/$25.00 ©2008 IEEE
c Copyright 2008, Nagoya university
Throughput Bottleneck of IP Transport
Energy Bottleneck of Internet
Ethernet FR ATM PPP FDDI OTN SDH Satellite Wireless Coax Fiber Pair Cable
IP
TELNET SMTP SNMP POP FTP HTTP TCP UDP
DNS
Bottleneck of TCP/IP-based Internet
c Copyright 2008, Nagoya university
Source: H. Shinohara, ITU Symposium on ICTs and Climate Change, April, 2008, Kyoto.
CO2 Reduction Attained by PON Architecture
Source: Mr. Michael Scharf, University of Stuttgart, Presented at ECOC 2007 Workshop "Future Internet Design,” Berlin, September 16, 2007.
c Copyright 2008, Nagoya university
C.Lange, M. Braune, and N. Gieschen,” OFC/NFOEC 2008, JWA105, February, 2008.
FTTB Nnetworks Consume More Energy than FTTH Networks
ECOC 2008, 21-25 September 2008, Brussels, Belgium
We.3.A.1
Vol. 6 - 107
Entities to be controlled
(Local Arrangement)
Queuing Mgt.
Local/Global Arrangement
Priority queueing, Weighted fair queueing
Remarks
Traffic Redirecting
Vol. 6 - 108
c Copyright 2008, Nagoya university
Regarding traffic engineering, the ability to provide maximum services is the key.
IPv4 DSCP byte/IPv6 trafficclass byte, Aggregate perDiffServ Class (CoS) hop behavior -In band signaling along data path -Evaluation of QoS demand and Flow per flow feedback by transit flow router Flow Router -TCP jump start depending on (dynamic) available bandwidth -Signaling and resource handling Traffic (reservation) In Band Flow Engineering -Problems stemming from RSVP Signaling (connection (Connection requiring periodic refreshing of (IETF IntServ) oriented) /Flow the reservations of all flows (not applicable to large networks) Oriented; More Global -Connection admission control NGN based on static information Connection Arrange -Class base QoS control (like ment) (SIP) DiffServe) -Constraint-based routing Class -No capacity admission control -3 bit of MPLS QoS header (Forwarding MPLS per LSP -Network bandwidth Equivalent Class) partitioning with Layer2/ MPLS connection by -Time required to Out Band Signaling Connection connection establish/release connection Queuing mgt. and traffic engineering will compliment each other. 55
Buffer Management Packet/cell
Mechanism
IP Traffic Management Mechanisms
Source: Mr. Michael Scharf, University of Stuttgart, Presented at ECOC 2007 Workshop "Future Internet Design,” Berlin, September 16, 2007.
Outline
c Copyright 2008, Nagoya university
6. Conclusions
5. Hierarchical Optical Path Networks and Technologies
4. Bottleneck of Present IP-based Technologies Posed to Future Networks
3. Advances in video Technologies
2. Access Network Development
1. Overview of Transport Network Evolution
c Copyright 2008, Nagoya university
ITU-T Recommendation Y.1541, "Network performance objectives for IP-based services," February 2006.
The values of all objectives are provisional and they need not be met by networks until they are revised (up or down) based on real operational experience.
Class 6, 7: QoS class for video services
Table 3/Y.1541 Provisional IP network QoS class definitions and network performance objectives
IPTD: IP Packet Transfer Delay IPDV: IP packet Delay Variation IPLR: IP packet Loss Ratio IPER: P packet Error Ratio IPRR: IP Packet Reordering Ratio
Class 0, 1: For real-time service including VoIP
Table 1/Y.1541 IP network QoS class definitions and network performance objectives
Provisional QoS Class for IP Video Transmission
ECOC 2008, 21-25 September 2008, Brussels, Belgium
We.3.A.1
978-1-4244-2229-6/08/$25.00 ©2008 IEEE
R. Tucker, "Optical Packet-Switched WDM Networks: a Cost and Energy Perspective," OFC/NFOEC 2008, OMG1, San Diego, February 2008.
NTT
AT&T
KDDI
ALU
15
16
17
18
OECC2008, PDP-6
OFC2008, PDP7
OFC2008, PDP3
OFC2008, PDP2
OFC2008, PDP1
ECOC2007, PD1.7
OFC2007, PDP22
OFC2007, PDP20
ECOC2006, Th4.1.3
Conference
Vol. 6 - 109
c Copyright 2008, Nagoya university
Source: NTT Network Innovation Laboratories
1, 2, 4: real time transmission experiments Others: off-line experiment
NTT
CoreOptics
14
20
NTT
13
Melbourune Univ.
Lucent
12
19
Organization
Ref.
1
0.1
16.4
1
0.8
3
1
20.4
1
Capacity (Tb/s)
2100 (DSF)
1000
2550 (DMF)
1000
640
1300
2375 (SMF)
240
2000(NZDF)
Distance (km)
111
107
111
121.9
114
100
111
111
107
Line Rate (Gb/s)
10
5
ROADM node
PDM-OFDMQPSK
PDM-OFDMQPSK
PDM-QPSK
PDM OFDM-8QAM
PDM-RZ-8PSK
OFDM-DQPSK
PDM-RZ-QPSK
CSRZ-DQPSK
RZ-DQPSK
Modulation
Challenges on 100-Gb/s long-haul DWDM Transmission for 100GbE Transport
c Copyright 2008, Nagoya university
http://www.caida.org/outreach/presentations/nanog9806/
Internet Hop Distance Distribution
~ 1 Tb/s Electrical Router
Optical Processing
Electrical Processing
Optical Path
Ethernet, etc.
IP
~ 10 Tb/s Photonic Router
IP Layer Cut-through on Optical Path
L2/L1
L2
SDH/SONET
L3
Optical Fast Path/Circuit Switching
New Protocol
~10 years ~ 100 Tb/s Photonic Router
~5 years
(1) Introduction of HO-OP (Waveband) (2) Introduction of Optical Fast Circuit/Path Switching (Burst Switching)
HO-OP(Waveband)
Optical Path
Ethernet, etc.
L2 L2/L1
IP
Future Networks L3
New IP Networksafter 2004
c Copyright 2008, Nagoya university
L2/L1
L2
L3
Traditional IP Networks
Direction towards Network Throughput Expansion and Total Power Reduction
c Copyright 2008, Nagoya university
Photonic MPLS
Traffic Jam at Node
Photonic Network
Existing Network
WDM + (electrical) IP Router
Wavelength Routing on Photonic Superhighway
ECOC 2008, 21-25 September 2008, Brussels, Belgium
We.3.A.1
IP (Two way signaling)
Burst
!!"% ""!"" # ""! #"!
~3/8
Electrical Router CutThrough on Optical Paths
Vol. 6 - 110
c Copyright 2008, Nagoya university
~1/20
Introduction of Optical Fast Circuit Switching and Hierarchical Optical Paths
Single Shelf Router Throughput: 0.64 Tb/s (WAN Count), Total Throughput: 18.6 Tb/s (WAN Count) Node Terminating Traffic Ratio: 30 %, Service Traffic Ratio for IP/OCS: 1/4
Power Consumption
Electrical Router
BXC
(M+(L+1)+M)/ Mx(L+1)
L hop
c Copyright 2008, Nagoya university
L hop
Band Utilization =
M: # of Optical Paths per Waveband
Multi-Layer Optical Path Network
Single Layer Optical Path Network
Example: M=8, L=4, =0.9 R=0.58, M=16, L=4, =0.9 R=0.51, M=16, L=6, =0.9 R=0.39
Ratio of total cross-connect switch port (Multi-layerSingle Layer) =
Comparison of Cross-Connect Switch Port Number
c Copyright 2008, Nagoya university
Node cost reduction
•Reduction of necessary number of switch ports •Reduction of switch size
WXC
Optical Fiber
WaveBand
…
Reduction in Power Consumption
c Copyright 2008, Nagoya university
Optical Fast PS/CS
% !! " #"!"!! " ##"$! "#" ! !! %
IP
New Protocol
Merits • Large Capacity Optical Path is Realized by Multiplexing Multiple Optical Paths •Routing is done as a WaveBand; cut through of wavelength level routing processing
…
&!!'
Ethernet FRATM PPP FDDIOTN SDH Wireless Satellite Coax Fiber Pair Cable
IP
TCP UDP
DNS TELNET SNMP SMTP FTP HTTP POP
WaveBand Grouped optical path to be treated as a higher order path
Hierarchical Optical Path Networks
… …
Introduction of Fast Optical Path/Circuit Switching and OBS - Solving IP Bottleneck? -
ECOC 2008, 21-25 September 2008, Brussels, Belgium
We.3.A.1
978-1-4244-2229-6/08/$25.00 ©2008 IEEE Waveband multiplexers/demultiplexers
Waveband conversion technologies
Vol. 6 - 111
c Copyright 2008, Nagoya university
Several algorithms based on heuristics relaxation have been developed; they are categorized as follows.
The number of binary variables in the combinatorial optimization problem explosively increases with network size. This characteristic makes the problem computationally impossible to accurately solve for large networks.
The design aims at minimizing cost functions subject to waveband and wavelength continuity constraint.
c Copyright 2008, Nagoya university
More detailed explanations are given in Ref [1].
Cluster-search method in a source-destination Cartesian product space [21], [48]
Relaxation-based methods [41], [44]
On demand waveband assignment [42], [43]
Waveband tunnel construction first [45]
Grooming of wavelength paths having common source/ destination or partially shared routes [46], [47].
c Copyright 2008, Nagoya university
WXC: Wavelength path cross-connect BXC: Waveband cross-connect
Network control protocol (Extension of ASON/GMPLS)
The waveband routing and waveband assignment problem of multi-granular optical networks is a generalization of the single-granular optical network design problem.
BXC
WXC
Multi-layer optical path cross-connect switch architectures
Hierarchical Optical Path Network Design (2)
,#&"( . . .
Hierarchical OP network design algorithms
Hierarchical Optical Path Network Technologies
Hierarchical Optical Path Network Design (1)
th f WB Pa umber o
op N
H Average
c Copyright 2008, Nagoya university
Ref. [2, 34]
) %%%)"%') *#'
) %%))%)"$*#'%(+ )&%')( $)$)+%'!( / *") "-' $"-'0
Reduction in Switch Port Number
ECOC 2008, 21-25 September 2008, Brussels, Belgium
We.3.A.1
S-space
Node pair Point Traffic Demand Value
D-space
Normalized Network Cost
Vol. 6 - 112
0
) BPHT : X.Cao et al., IEEE J-SAC ,2003
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Average Optical Path Demand between Nodes
WB Bandwidth=8
Single Layer Optical Path NW
end-to-end BPHT () Proposed
Network Cost Comparison
c Copyright 2008, Nagoya university
0
0.5
1.0
1.5
2.0
Ref. [33, 34]
Multilayer Optical NW/ Single Layer Optical NW
c Copyright 2008, Nagoya university
Ref. [33, 34]
8
The proposed method searches for the clusters in the space and places them into wavebands.
A Cartesian product space is introduces, in which nearby traffic demands are classfied as clusters of points.
Original Network
Traffic Demand
S-D Cartesian product space
Introduction of S-D Cartesian Product Space
d3
D
S s3
d1
s1
d2
0
td
Ref. [35]
c Copyright 2008, Nagoya university
D-loop
…….. Loop number
td
Loop number
S-loop = ls
Accommodate remaining wavelength paths
S-loop
backup
primary path Wavelength demands
3. Adapt wavelength paths to waveband chain (= concatenated loops)
Establish primary and backup waveband paths routing by Suurballe’s algorithm
2. Establish waveband chains
1. Search for S-D loop pairs
Setup Waveband Chains between S-D loop pairs
Proposed Algorithm for Protected Network Design
Ref. [33, 34] c Copyright 2008, Nagoya university
Remaining Wavelength Path Accommodation
s2
s-d Cartesian product space
3. Add the wavelength paths in the cluster
routing of the waveband path by Dijkstra’s Algorithm
2. Establish waveband path
find a set of wavelength paths to be accommodated within a waveband
1. Search for clusters
Waveband Setup
Network Design Algorithm
ECOC 2008, 21-25 September 2008, Brussels, Belgium
We.3.A.1
978-1-4244-2229-6/08/$25.00 ©2008 IEEE
Ref. [35]
Vol. 6 - 113
Hierarchical
Single layer
c Copyright 2008, Nagoya university
Ref. [36, 37]
9x9
Numerical Results (2)
c Copyright 2008, Nagoya university
5x5
Numerical Results
Hierarchical with protection Single layer w/o protection
topology
N
of fiber / waveband
N
c Copyright 2008, Nagoya university
WXC: Wavelength path cross-connect BXC: Waveband cross-connect
Waveband conversion technologies
BXC
WXC
Multi-layer optical path cross-connect switch architectures
Waveband multiplexers/demultiplexers
Network control protocol (Extension of ASON/GMPLS)
Hierarchical OP network design algorithms
Hierarchical Optical Path Network Technologies
c Copyright 2008, Nagoya university
Ref. [35]
–8 wavebands per fiber –8 wavelengths per waveband
Capacity
–randomly distributed wavelength paths
demands
wavelength converter
Traffic
NO
–9x9 polygrid (81 nodes, N=9)
Physical
Simulation Parameters
ECOC 2008, 21-25 September 2008, Brussels, Belgium
We.3.A.1
Output Fiber
Output Slab Waveguide
Vol. 6 - 114
AWG 2
• WB MUX/DEMUX can be developed using concatenated conventional AWGs; they are connected via waveguides that offer special connection rules.
c Copyright 2008, Nagoya university
AWG 1
Newly Developed WB MUX/DEMUX using Concatenated AWGs
c Copyright 2008, Nagoya university
• When input optical fiber is shifted by one port, the output port of each channel will shift by one port.
• Input optical channels are demultiplexed and output from each output port channel by channel
Input Slab Waveguide
Silicon Substrate
AWG
Output Waveguides
Waveguide Cross-Section View
Input Waveguides
Input Fiber
Si Substrate
Silica Layer
Waveguide Core
Arrayed-Waveguide Grating (AWG)
2, 3,
1,
WB k
WB3
~ , l l+1, l+2, l+3, ~ , 2l 2l+1, 2l+2, 2l+3, ~ , 3l
....
..... .... 2, 3,
....
WB2
~ , l l+1, l+2, l+3, ~ , 2l 2l+1, 2l+2, 2l+3, ~ , 3l
....
WB1 WB2
1,
c Copyright 2008, Nagoya university
Ref. [40, 41]
(b) Interleaved WB Arrangement
(a) Continuous WB Arrangement
WB1
Waveband Arrangement
c Copyright 2008, Nagoya university
It retains multi/demultiplexing granularity at the individual wavelength channel level while outputting WBs at different ports. It can accommodate multiple input fibers simultaneously and demultiplex each band to different output ports. [40]-[43]
Two concatenated conventional individual wavelength channel AWGs
8-skip-0 band configuration with a total of 40 channels and 100-GHz spacing [39]
Specially designed two concatenated arrayed-waveguide gratings (AWG)
8-skip-0 band operation supporting a total of 32 channels at 100-GHz spacing -409 layers, non-linear dispersion at the band edges [38]
A thin-film filter
Waveband Multi/Demultiplexer
ECOC 2008, 21-25 September 2008, Brussels, Belgium
We.3.A.1
( ( (
( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( (
C B A 15 11 , 7 , 3 ) D C B A 16 12 , 8 , 4 ) D C B A 1 13 , 9 , 5 ) D C B A 2 14 , 10 , 6 ) D C B A 3 15 , 11 , 7 ) D C, B, A) 4 16 12 8 D C B A 5 1 , 13 , 9 ) D C, B, A) 6 2 14 10 D C B A 7 3 , 15 , 11 ) D C B A 8 4 , 16 , 12 ) D C, B, A) 9 5 1 13 D C, B, A) 10 6 2 14 D C B A 11 7 , 3 , 15 ) D C, B, A) 12 8 4 16
D
( 13D 9 C, 5 B, 1 A) ( 14D 10C, 6 B, 2 A)
AWG Y y1 Y1 y2 Y2 y3 Y3 y4 Y4 y5 Y5 y6 Y6 y7 Y7 y8 Y8 y9 Y9 y10 Y10 y11 Y11 y12 Y12 y13 Y13 y14 Y14 y15 Y15 y16 Y16 y17 Y17 y18 Y18 y19 Y19 y20 Y20
....
13C14C15C16C 9 C10C11C12C 5 C6 C7 C8 C 1 C2 C3 C4 C 13D14D15D16D 9 D10D11D12D 5 D6 D7 D8 D 1 D2 D3 D4 D
WB4C WB3C WB2C WB1C WB4D WB3D WB2D WB1D WB4A 13A14A15A16A WB3A 9 A10A11A12A WB2A 5 A6 A7 A8 A
13B14B15B16B 9 B10B11B12B 5 B6 B7 B8 B 1 B2 B3 B4 B
WB4B WB3B WB2B WB1B
WB1A 1 A2 A3 A4 A
....
WB2
WB3
Vol. 6 - 115
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20
c Copyright 2008, Nagoya university
Ref. [41]
116
116
116
116
7 cm
WB 4 WB 3 WB 2
WB 4 WB 3 WB 2 WB 1
WB 4 WB 3 WB 2 WB 1
WB 4 WB 3 WB 2 WB 1
Loss: