How Do You Calculate the Normalized Frequency for a Multimode Fiber?

Join the discussion
Ask a follow-up here, or get your own question answered by working scientists, mathematicians and engineers — people, not an autocomplete.
Real named experts · corrections over time · the nuance an AI answer skips
4 replies · 1K views
Bananen
Messages
8
Reaction score
0
Hi,

I'm having trouble calculating the normalized frequency for a multimode fiber. Here's the formula:

V=(2π/λ)⋅a⋅√(n12-n22)

where λ=900 nm, a=200μm, n1=1.460, n2=1.455

Here's how I plug in the numbers:

V=(2π/(900*10-9))⋅(200*10-6)⋅√(1.4602-1.4552)=167This is an easy calculation I know that, but I get the wrong answer. It's supposed to be 84 but I get 167 which is obviously far away from the real answer. I don't understand what I do wrong?
 
Physics news on Phys.org
Well, the answer is 168.57... , so either the formula, the numbers or the supposed result are wrong. Since 84=168/2, it should be a matter of a factor of 2.
 
On my first attempt at calculating V I also get what you did. So that leads me to ask how you know it's supposed to be 84.
 
Thank you, yes something must be wrong. It's very strange! But thank you for your answer.
 
Pixel: I'm doing old exams in preparation for my own so I calculate exam problems and checking my answers by looking at the solutions. They don't write the numbers out just the formula and then the answer so it's not very helpful