Multi-mode fiber
The propagation of light through a multi-mode optical fiber
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A laser bouncing down an acrylic rod, illustrating the total internal reflection of light in a multi-mode optical fiber.
Main article: Multi-mode optical fiber
Fiber with large core diameter (greater than 10 micrometers) may be analyzed by geometrical optics. Such fiber is called multi-mode fiber, from the electromagnetic analysis (see below). In a step-index multi-mode fiber, rays
of light are guided along the fiber core by total internal reflection.
Rays that meet the core-cladding boundary at a high angle (measured
relative to a line normal to the boundary), greater than the critical angle
for this boundary, are completely reflected. The critical angle
(minimum angle for total internal reflection) is determined by the
difference in index of refraction between the core and cladding
materials. Rays that meet the boundary at a low angle are refracted from
the core into the cladding, and do not convey light and hence information along the fiber. The critical angle determines the acceptance angle of the fiber, often reported as a numerical aperture.
A high numerical aperture allows light to propagate down the fiber in
rays both close to the axis and at various angles, allowing efficient
coupling of light into the fiber. However, this high numerical aperture
increases the amount of dispersion as rays at different angles have different path lengths and therefore take different times to traverse the fiber.
In graded-index fiber, the index of refraction in the core decreases
continuously between the axis and the cladding. This causes light rays
to bend smoothly as they approach the cladding, rather than reflecting
abruptly from the core-cladding boundary. The resulting curved paths
reduce multi-path dispersion because high angle rays pass more through
the lower-index periphery of the core, rather than the high-index
center. The index profile is chosen to minimize the difference in axial
propagation speeds of the various rays in the fiber. This ideal index
profile is very close to a parabolic relationship between the index and the distance from the axis.
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