lightcarriers
Lightcarriers are the optical signals that carry information in optical communications and photonics. In this usage, a carrier is the steady-state light field produced by a laser or light-emitting diode that is modulated to encode data. Photons acting as carriers transmit both energy and information through a medium such as an optical fiber or free space.
In modern fiber networks the optical carrier is typically a narrow-linewidth laser at a characteristic wavelength,
The carrier's properties determine performance. The frequency and spectral width affect channel spacing and distance, while
Lightcarriers differ from radio-frequency carriers in frequency, energy per photon, and propagation characteristics. They enable high-bandwidth
See also: optical carrier, photon, laser, modulation, wavelength-division multiplexing.