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Slide Notes

Hair-thin glass wires used to transfer beams of infrared light containing information at high speeds
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Fibre Optics

Published on Nov 23, 2015

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PRESENTATION OUTLINE

Fiber Optics

By: Erling Rolseth
Hair-thin glass wires used to transfer beams of infrared light containing information at high speeds
Photo by Wysz

Wavelength

Wavelengths of light signals vary between 850 nano-meters and 1550 nano-meters.

Frequency

Being in the infrared section of the EM spectrum, the frequency approximates from 430 GHz (gigahertz) to 300 THz (terahertz)

Energy

Because of infrared light's high frequency and short wavelength, the waves travelling through fibre optic cables have a lower energy than visible light, but more than microwaves
Photo by Barta IV

Is It Harmful?

Can cause visual impairment if you look directly into a live wire; infrared light will burn your retna
Photo by Rob Unreall

Fiber Optic Communication

Telephones
Fiber optic communication can be used to encode infrared waves with audio-converted-digital messages (telephone calls)
Photo by plenty.r.

History

Early devices resembling fibre optic communication were created in the late 1800's (Bell's Photophone), but the original product known as fibre optics was created in 1970 by Corning Glass Works after a proposal in 1966 by Charles K. Kao and George Hockham

How It Works

An infrared wave is encoded with information through its amplitude, the wave is then cut up and sent through the cable. The amplitude of the sections is determined and interpreted as binary to communicate information.

Social Benefits

Allows for high speed communication around the globe through cables the size of a human hair, revolutionizing information transfer for social and corporate needs.

Limitations

Can only hold a limited amount of information; luckily, none of our cables have reached that yet.
Beams attenuate over time due to impurities in the glass, an uneven interface with the surrounding medium, and the rays making up the beam reflecting at slightly different intervals
Photo by tainkeh