Tuesday, March 27, 2007

Fiber

Some 10 billion digital bits can be transmitted per second along an optical fiber link in a commercial network, enough to carry tens of thousands of telephone calls. Hair-thin fibers consist of two concentric layers of high-purity silica glass the core and the cladding, which are enclosed by a protective sheath. Light rays modulated into digital pulses with a laser or a light-emitting diode move along the core without penetrating the cladding.

The light stays confined to the core because the cladding has a lower refractive index—a measure of its ability to bend light. Refinements in optical fibers, along with the development of new lasers and diodes, may one day allow commercial fiber-optic networks to carry trillions of bits of data per second.

4 comments:

HDMI HDTV to VGA HD15 3 RCA Converter Adapter cable said...

Wonderful, post.Very much informative. I am really impressed with your post.

Sony Laptop Repair said...

Amazing post. Useful and informative.I say i gained a lot of information from your post.

DVD Duplication said...

really cool ones but adds some more in it!!

joomla development services said...

I actually like what you've acquired here, really like what you're stating and the way in which you say it. You make it entertaining and you still care for to keep it smart. This is really a great web site.