On the Optimum Energy-per-bit Launch Power in Coherent Hollow-core Fibre Transmission Systems
Pith reviewed 2026-06-26 22:51 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
A 1000 km C-band hollow-core fibre link reduces total power consumption by 41.5% at the minimum energy-per-bit launch power, with a 2.2% throughput penalty.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
In hollow-core fibre systems the energy per bit is minimized at a launch power where the increase in signal strength is balanced against the growth of nonlinear penalties. Operating a 1000 km C-band link at this point produces a 41.5% reduction in total power consumption accompanied by only a 2.2% reduction in throughput.
What carries the argument
The energy-per-bit quantity obtained from the link power-consumption model that includes launch power, amplifier consumption, and nonlinear penalties specific to hollow-core fibre.
If this is right
- Total power consumption falls by 41.5% while throughput falls by only 2.2%.
- The same minimum-energy-per-bit operating point applies to C-band coherent links over hollow-core fibre.
- Nonlinear penalties set the location of the energy-per-bit minimum rather than linear loss alone.
- Power savings scale with distance because the nonlinear contribution grows with length.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- Operators could reduce electricity cost and heat load by deliberately detuning launch power away from the usual maximum-capacity point.
- The result may shift the economic case for replacing standard fibre with hollow-core spans in power-sensitive routes.
- Further gains are possible if the same energy-per-bit minimization is combined with adaptive modulation or sleep-mode amplifiers.
Load-bearing premise
The link model used to compute energy-per-bit and throughput accurately captures all relevant power-consuming components and nonlinear penalties for hollow-core fibre at the stated distances and wavelengths.
What would settle it
Direct measurement of total electrical power draw and net throughput on a real 1000 km hollow-core fibre span when the launch power is set to the calculated minimum-energy-per-bit value.
Figures
read the original abstract
We investigate the optimum energy per bit in hollow-core-fibre transmission systems. We show that a 1000 km C-band link can achieve a 41.5% reduction in total power consumption when operating at the minimum energy-per-bit launch power with only 2.2% throughput penalty.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The manuscript investigates the optimum energy-per-bit launch power in coherent hollow-core fibre (HC-PCF) transmission systems. It claims that a 1000 km C-band link achieves a 41.5% reduction in total power consumption when operated at the minimum energy-per-bit launch power, incurring only a 2.2% throughput penalty.
Significance. If the underlying power-consumption model and hollow-core-fibre nonlinear interference term are accurate and complete, the result would be significant for energy-efficient long-haul system design, as it identifies a practical operating point that trades minimal rate for substantial power savings in a technology with intrinsically lower nonlinearity.
major comments (2)
- The 41.5% power-reduction and 2.2% throughput-penalty figures are obtained by minimising total electrical power divided by throughput. No explicit model is supplied that enumerates every power-consuming block (transmitter, receiver, DSP, each EDFA stage) or that specifies the nonlinear interference coefficient and loss profile used for HC-PCF; without these, the location of the minimum and the reported percentages cannot be reproduced or stress-tested.
- The abstract states the result for a 1000 km C-band link but provides neither the capacity formula employed to convert SNR to achievable rate nor any validation against measured HC-fibre parameters at the stated wavelengths and distances; this renders the headline numbers unverifiable from the given material.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for their comments on our manuscript. We provide point-by-point responses below, agreeing where additional detail is needed for reproducibility and indicating the corresponding revisions.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: The 41.5% power-reduction and 2.2% throughput-penalty figures are obtained by minimising total electrical power divided by throughput. No explicit model is supplied that enumerates every power-consuming block (transmitter, receiver, DSP, each EDFA stage) or that specifies the nonlinear interference coefficient and loss profile used for HC-PCF; without these, the location of the minimum and the reported percentages cannot be reproduced or stress-tested.
Authors: We agree that an explicit enumeration of all power-consuming blocks and the precise values of the nonlinear interference coefficient and loss profile for HC-PCF are required for full reproducibility. The revised manuscript will include a complete breakdown of the power model together with the exact coefficient and loss values employed. revision: yes
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Referee: The abstract states the result for a 1000 km C-band link but provides neither the capacity formula employed to convert SNR to achievable rate nor any validation against measured HC-fibre parameters at the stated wavelengths and distances; this renders the headline numbers unverifiable from the given material.
Authors: The capacity formula is the standard Shannon formula applied to the SNR after nonlinear interference, and the fibre parameters are taken from published HC-PCF measurements. The revised manuscript will state the capacity formula explicitly and cite the specific measured parameters used for the C-band wavelengths and distances considered. revision: yes
Circularity Check
No circularity detected; derivation chain not visible in supplied text
full rationale
The abstract states a 41.5% power reduction at minimum energy-per-bit launch power but supplies no equations, fitting procedures, or self-citations. The reader's summary explicitly notes that no equations or fitting are visible, preventing any inspection for self-definitional, fitted-input, or self-citation circularity. Without load-bearing steps that reduce to inputs by construction, the result cannot be flagged as circular. The model is treated as an external computation whose completeness is a separate modeling question, not a circularity issue.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
Reference graph
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discussion (0)
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