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HomeCoherent OpticsSubmarine Cable Repeaters: How Signals Survive 20,000 km
Submarine Cable Repeaters: How Signals Survive 20,000 km

Submarine Cable Repeaters: How Signals Survive 20,000 km

Last Updated: April 2, 2026
32 min read
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Submarine Cable Repeaters: How Signals Survive 20,000 km | MapYourTech
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Submarine Optical Systems

Submarine Cable Repeaters: How Signals Survive 20,000 km

How undersea EDFA repeaters extend optical transmission across transoceanic distances — pressure-vessel housing design, pump laser redundancy, span lengths, and the 25-year OSNR budget challenge.

1. Introduction

The internet carries exabytes of data each day across transoceanic distances — and the overwhelming majority of that traffic travels not through satellites, but along a network of slender fiber-optic cables resting on the ocean floor. These cables cross the Atlantic in roughly 7,000 km, span the Pacific in more than 13,000 km, and connect continents with latencies in the tens of milliseconds. For any of that to work, optical signals — which follow the same physics as any other light, attenuating as they travel — must be continuously regenerated across distances where no technician can reach and no truck roll is possible.

The device that makes transoceanic optical transmission viable is the submarine cable repeater: a sealed pressure vessel containing erbium-doped fiber amplifiers (EDFAs) that restore optical signal power at intervals of approximately 40 to 80 km. These repeaters are engineered to entirely different tolerances than their terrestrial counterparts. They must operate reliably at ocean depths of 4,000 to 8,000 meters, under hydrostatic pressures exceeding 1,000 atmospheres, at constant near-freezing temperatures, for a design lifetime of 25 years, without any possibility of hands-on maintenance. When a repeater fails, the only option is a cable ship — a repair that costs several million dollars and takes weeks. The stakes of getting the design right are therefore exceptionally high.

This article provides a thorough technical examination of how submarine repeaters are built and how they function. It covers the physics of EDFA amplification as applied to the undersea environment, the mechanical engineering of pressure-vessel housings, pump laser architecture and redundancy strategies, the relationship between span length and system performance, and — critically — how system designers plan for optical signal-to-noise ratio (OSNR) degradation over a 25-year life through beginning-of-life (BOL) and end-of-life (EOL) budget calculations. The treatment is aimed at engineers who need to understand these systems at a design level, whether for network planning, system commissioning, procurement evaluation, or academic study.

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Sanjay Yadav

Optical Networking Engineer & Architect • Founder, MapYourTech

Optical networking engineer with nearly two decades of experience across DWDM, OTN, coherent optics, submarine systems, and cloud infrastructure. Founder of MapYourTech.

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