Passive media components such as cables, cable splices, and connectors cause attenuation. Although attenuation is significantly lower for optical fiber than for other media, it still occurs in both multimode and single-mode transmissions. It's measured in decibels per kilometer (dB/km), and it determines how far a signal can travel before it becomes too weak to read. A standard single-mode fiber operating at 1550 nm loses. Attenuation is the reduction in optical signal strength as light moves through a fiber optic cable. Some of it is from bending, scattering, or impurities. It can either be inherent within the glass. Current legal documents describe the areas of application of fiber optic cables, requirements for their resistance to mechanical and climatic load, as well as requirements for the electrical characteristics of optical cables with metal structural elements. For example, the allowed tensile strength.
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