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SPECS

Redundancy

Diversity

Length

Landing Points

Service Life

Greatest Depth

Standards & Protection

Engineering Fact Sheet

Plow Network Redundancy - A separate pair of fiber optics connects Juneau and Seattle, Juneau and Anchorage, Anchorage and Fairbanks, Anchorage and Seattle (AU-E) and Anchorage and Seattle (AU-W).

Route Diversity - Alaska Unite Network achieves complete route diversity Anchorage and Seattle by using routes on both AU-East and AU-West to create a physically divers ring interconnecting these locations. Juneau and Fairbanks have component diversity but are on a collapse ring configuration. Diversity for these markets is achieved through capacity on other facilities.

Total Design Capacity - 110 billion bits per second can be provided in a diversely routed ring configuration utilizing AU-East and AU-West cable segments. Another 530 billion bits per second can be provided as stand alone capacity on AU-West. AU-North capacity can be increased to greater than a TB/s through advancements in terrestrial transmission abilities.

Length of Alaska United - Total: 4178 statute miles (3537 undersea, 641 overland)

Landing Points - Alaska end: Juneau, Whittier and Valdez CONUS: Seattle, Washington; Warrenton, Oregon

Service Life - Minimum 25 years

Greatest Water Depth - 15,617 ft.

Standards & Protection
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SONET (Synchronous Optical Network) based system
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Bit Error Rate (BER) less than one in ten trillion bits sent
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Automated Protection Switching (APS) for equipment failure
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Route surveyed and plow buried from shore to 4,900 ft.


Engineering Fact Sheet
Repeaters
Alaska United includes 60 optical amplifiers (also called EDFAs, Erbium-doped Fiber Amplifiers). These undersea amplifiers are integrated into the cable and are powered by "constant-current" PFEs (power feed equipment) located at the three cable landing stations. These EDFAs amplify the optical signal without any conversion to an intermediate electrical signal.

Fiber Strands
Alaska United network system has been designed to support WDM (wavelength division multiplexing) whereby four separate wavelengths (colors) each can carry an OC-192 (optical carrier level 192 which is 9.95328 Mbps or 129,024 traditional voice circuits). Initially Alaska United will carry one OC-192 signal. Each fiber pair can be upgraded incrementally at OC-192 signal levels by adding shore-based electronics without changing the wet plant.

Alaska United has a minimum of four fiber strands in all cable cross-sections (i.e., 2-fiber ring in a common cable sheath). One PSBU (power-switched branching unit) is included in Alaska United - East and provides a common point where three undersea cable segments are joined. The PSBU provides the ability to remotely switch the power configuration of the cable and thereby enhance system reliability. The SONET terminal equipment can interface standard asynchronous and synchronous circuit types including: DS-1, DS-3, OC-1, OC-3, OC-12, OC-48, OC192 and EC-1 (electrical carrier level 1).

SONET
SONET stands for Synchronous Optical NETwork and is a fiber optic transport standard developed by ANSI (American National Standard Institute). SONET has the key advantages of providing high-capacity fiber optic transport, defines a system of synchronous signal levels, includes a high-level of OAM&P (Operations, Administration, Maintenance, and Provisioning) capability, supports automatic protection switching, allows a high-degree of interoperability between different vendor platforms, etc.

Protections
Unlike most terrestrial SONET systems, subsea systems are often configured as a "collapsed ring." A collapsed ring means that a 2-fiber transmission ring is contained in a single common cable sheath. The reason for this is the relatively high capital cost of subsea systems (i.e., it would nearly double the capital cost to lay two diversely routed cables). This is why the route selection and installation of a subsea system is so critical to prevent damage to the cable. Since Alaska United is a SONET system it includes automatic protection switching (APS) to protect against failure of any individual electronic or fiber optic component.

BER
BER refers to the ratio of error bits to the total number of bits transmitted. Alaska United is an astoundingly small one bit error occurring every 10,000,000,000,000 bits sent (this is three to four orders of magnitude better than satellite or microwave).

Diversity
Alaska United network has full "route diversity" between Anchorage and Seattle. Juneau and Fairbanks service not diversely routed since the fiber ring is contained in a common cable sheath. However, by pairing connectivity on other facilities, true route diversity can be achieved.

Cable Hazards
The primary causes of cable failures are external aggressions such as bottom fishing, ocean currents and geological events. However, 95 percent of submarine cable failures worldwide are attributable to fishing activities.

To guard against these factors, Alaska United will be plow buried from shore to a depth of 4,900 feet or greater except in rocky areas where bottom conditions don't permit burial or bottom contact fishing. Additionally, the cable route has been selected to avoid as many external aggression factors as feasibly possible. Extensive research of fishing activities and practices has been done to avoid busy fishing areas. Cable armoring and burial is planned in areas where potential fishing is unavoidable. GCI will ensure that the Alaska United cable route is identified as a "cable protection route" on nautical charts. GCI will also actively communicate with the fishing industry and monitor fishing activities to decrease the possibility of damage to the cable.

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