Airstream Gate 5 Fiber Optic Practice Test

Session length

1 / 20

The principle of operation of Optical Time Domain Reflectometers is similar to:

Radar

The main idea tested is that Optical Time Domain Reflectometry uses time-based reflections to locate events along a medium, much like radar. An OTDR sends a short optical pulse into the fiber and then monitors the light that returns from the fiber due to Rayleigh backscatter and any reflections at discontinuities. By measuring how long it takes for that light to come back, and how strong the returned signal is, the device can map where along the fiber losses or faults occur. The time delay translates to distance because light travels at a known speed in the fiber.

This is why radar is the best comparison: radar also emits a pulse and listens for echoes to determine distance and characteristics of objects. The other options don’t fit this time-resolved, along-the-length measurement. Mirrors just reflect light without providing a time-based profile of a path, lenses focus rather than track reflections along a medium, and power meters and sources deal with power levels rather than mapping reflections along a fiber.

Mirrors

Lenses

Power meters and sources

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