10-Gigabit-capable passive optical network (XG-PON & XGS-PON) | |
Abbreviation | G.987 |
---|---|
Status | In force |
Year started | 2010 |
Latest version | 3.0 June 2012 |
Organization | ITU-T |
Committee | ITU-T Study Group 15 |
Base standards | GPON |
Related standards | NG-PON2, Higher Speed PON |
Domain | Telecommunication |
License | Freely available |
Website | www |
10G-PON (also known as XG-PON or G.987) is a 2010 computer networking standard for data links, capable of delivering shared Internet access rates up to 10 Gbit/s (gigabits per second) over existing dark fiber. This is the ITU-T's next-generation standard following on from GPON or gigabit-capable PON. Optical fibre is shared by many subscribers in a network known as FTTx in a way that centralises most of the telecommunications equipment, often displacing copper phone lines that connect premises to the phone exchange. Passive optical network (PON) architecture has become a cost-effective way to meet performance demands in access networks, and sometimes also in large optical local networks for fibre-to-the-desk.[1]
Passive optical networks are used for the fibre-to-the-home or fibre-to-the-premises last mile with splitters that connect each central transmitter to many subscribers. The 10 Gbit/s shared capacity is the downstream speed broadcast to all users connected to the same PON, and the 2.5 Gbit/s upstream speed uses multiplexing techniques to prevent data frames from interfering with each other. Each user has a network device that converts between the optical signals and the signals used in building wiring, such as Ethernet and wired analogue plain old telephone service. XGS-PON is a related technology that can deliver upstream and downstream (symmetrical) speeds of up to 10 Gbit/s (gigabits per second), first approved in 2016 as G.9807.1.[2][3] XGS-PON uses time division multiplexing (TDM) and time division multiple access (TDMA).[4]