New Fiber Optics In The Works 89
Logic Bomb writes: "An article from MIT's Technology Review has the details on a new kind of fiber optic cabling that could provide part of the backbone bandwidth increase everyone is looking for. Instead of sending the light through glass, the light is actually sent through nothing but air. The key is a tube lining made of a special class of materials called "photonic-band-gap" which manage to perform an almost-perfect reflection of particular wavelengths of light. I wonder if it'll be cheap enough for home use. :-)"
mmmmm....pr0n (Score:1)
Re:Makes me wonder... (Score:2)
Cost (Score:2)
Thoughts on fibers (Score:5)
Indeed with many of the increases in fiber-bandwidth having come from multiple frequencies of light & with greatly improved hardware soon to roll-out ('tunable' lasers & all-optical switches, some using light-frequency as a routing determinant) if these new fibers are truly limited in their frequency-transmisson they could find themselves hobbled when they eventually come to market.
I also wonder about splicing these cables, terminating them, etc. The difficulties of a single fiber were surmounted but with a number of wave-guides closely bonded together I imagine most present technology wouldn't work.
Those concens aside I can see a number of applications where a long-distance non-repeated cable could be of enormous use, particularly in under-sea cables.
Back to the when-can-we-see-this-in-our-homes I doubt we will ever as this particular technology seems unsuited for such an application. If the question were about fiber-in-general expect it to become possible in a few years.
Plastic-based fiber is proving to be cheaper & more versitile then glass based in the sort of mid/high density generally assumed for residential and now the sticking point is the connections & switching. Once cheap optical switches come onto the market it'll just be a matter of physical installation - presumably in about the same pattern cable-TV has used.
If you can get cable-TV now hopefully in about a deacade you'll begin having the option of fiber.
Imagine a Bewulf cluster of these... - sorry, couldn't resist.
Biography of Water? (Score:1)
He is also the author of H2O: A Biography of Water.
I have to say I'm curious, in the extreme. When is he coming out with "Air: Friend of Foe?" and "Fire: Ouch!".
Re:Home use? (Score:1)
Is this the same sort of thing as using the impedance change for a cable to determine the length (or length to the break) with traditional coax and TP networking? Never heard of a similar technique in fiber, but then again I haven't had much experience with fiber.
Future shock imminent, film at 11 (Score:1)
If you read your stats, you'll notice that bandwith price/performance ratio is improving at an even faster rate than CPU price/performance - the jumps in performance are bigger, but spaced farther in time than CPU performance jumps.
So bandwith is cheap, and getting cheaper. The only true barrier is latency. After all, increasing bandwidth is (basically) just a matter of bundeling more fibers pr. connection
Re:Telportation? (Score:2)
Re:problem is... (Score:2)
Test post (Score:1)
Re:Communications cycles (Score:1)
Re:problem is... (Score:1)
http://www.opticalsolutions.com/index1.htm
Re:Makes me wonder... (Score:2)
Speed of light in glass is what, about 1/3rd speed of light in vacuum? So it's only a threefold increase anyway; you get more than that with clever use of multiple frequencies down the same fibre etc.
Just checking, but I hope you mean you can get a better bandwith increase by using multiple frequencies (than by increasing the speed of transmission). I deal with Network Performance on a regular basis and most people keep forgeting that there are always two numbers to think about:
Bandwidth (how thick your pipe is)
and Latency (how long it takes to get from point A to point B).
We did some work for a company (who shall remain nameless) who moved all their servers to an East Coast data center and were trying to figure out why their Dallas branch office was having poor responce times. The final report to them included a sentance to the effect that "The top speed of this application is limited by the speed of light. There is no way to make this application go faster short of altering physics as we know it."
The customer was a bit angry (lots of dollars spent) and the DB Consultants from one of the BIG houses (won't say who but it starts with an "O"
Why this is important... (Score:1)
Now the bad news, this technology is likely a few years off, for telecom anyway, and will certainly be more expensive than silica fiber, which is amazingly cheap these days. Not to mention that the main barrier to any improvements in the fiber part of fiber optic telecommunications is the huge installed base of single mode silica fiber. Installation/right-of-way is the currently biggest cost associated with fiber systems. There is alot of unused bandwidth out there right now and any service provider would be crazy to spend mucho dinero to replace silica with any new technology at this stage in the game.
For the near future, other applications can benefit greatly from this technology. Especially since hollow band-gap waveguides can transmit near, mid and far-IR energy as well. Medical and industrial IR laser applications are longing for a low-loss, high-power IR delivery system.
This is still a very exciting concept and I hope to see more from these guys in the future.
-Dan
One of the biggest problems... (Score:2)
One of the biggest problems facing this is underwater lines. Let's say you produce one of these new lines underwater from California to Japan. All is well for 2 months, when suddenly all communication is completely cut.
A crew investigates at the bottom of the ocean. Something has cut the fiber-optic line into two pieces, and since the fiber is filled with air, the entire line has filled with water. Murky seawater. What do you do now? Pump air through it? There's bound to be residue that will impede light transmission. I guess that means there will have to be a new line laid.
Maybe they'll produce an armored sort of line to reduce the possibility of a cut. Hopefully that will prevent anything weird from happening.
Re:Home use? (Score:2)
Ok, I agree with your point. However, this is not FUD.
FUD is fear, uncertanty, and doubt. It is trying to undermine a product by making people think less of it. FUD is not "lame marketing crap I don't agree with".
Sorry to nitpick, but since the term FUD is used so often here on /., I would hope it would be used correctly.
Nitpick (Score:1)
Also... (Score:2)
It's not identical is application or results, but it's similar and another use of the same basic idea, so the earlier article and posts should make good reading. The article that prompted the previous story doesn't mention the photonic band gap, but this [soton.ac.uk] paper from the researcher discussed in the article does.
-Puk
fiber to the home... mmm mmm good (Score:2)
I can see it now:
"Dad, what do you mean that you could only download at 300k/sec... wow, that must have been soooo slow"
Fiber costs. (Score:2)
Fiber is cheap now. The high cost of fiber is not the fiber cable, it is the installation and maintenance. Add on the cost of all the routing equipment and you see where the real costs lay.
me too -- (Score:1)
If the cable is cut it is useless anyway. (Score:1)
The backbone is not in your basement: (Score:1)
For the last time, THE BACKBONE IS NOT IN YOUR BASEMENT.
Technologies that are being developed for the core are not being designed for your house. They never have been and, unless the semi-hierarchical design of the core dissolves into fractal jelly (which would be pretty interesting, actually, but won't happen as long as it's privately owned), they never will be, because the scalability problem in last-mile deployment is an absolute bitch.
That said, QWest and others are swimming in backbone bandwidth -- they can't sell it all!
Telportation? (Score:1)
Re:One of the biggest problems... (Score:1)
Ping times would be lower too (Score:1)
Re:Thoughts on fibers (Score:1)
I thought this happens already... (Score:1)
Next step is to put a vacuum in the tubes... (Score:2)
But can you step on it? (Score:1)
Re:Makes me wonder... (Score:1)
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Re:Makes me wonder... (Score:1)
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Re:Next step is to put a vacuum in the tubes... (Score:1)
This was stated in comment #8 I believe by JediTrainer on 04-19-01 14:49 EST, a full 10 minutes before your post. Was this an intentional attepmt to steal karma or merely not paying attention?
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Re:Next step is to put a vacuum in the tubes... (Score:1)
Background on WDM (Score:2)
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Re:Makes me wonder... (Score:1)
You're talking about a vacuum in a cylinder at most 1mm across (internally), with probably 1mm walls, that should take the 10^5 Pa required easily (standing on it would give a pressure of the order of 2x10^5, and you can stand on pipes with no problem whatsoever).
Re:Next step is to put a vacuum in the tubes... (Score:1)
The speed if light is only marginally faster in vacuum. Even then, the wave speed has no effect on the data rate. (I think it's obvious but maybe someone else could explain it to you.) Neither would this improve any slow ping times, the speed of light is not really an issue there.
What's more important is the problem of dispersion: different wavelenghts traveling at different speeds. It's present in any material. As a consequence, the waveforms are smeared out over time, so distances are limited (but long lines are possible with repeaters). It gets worse with higher data rates. With vacuum there won't be any of this problem, so the bandwidth would only be limited by the frequency of the light, some 10^14 Hz.
However, I've got the feeling you still have to worry about dispersion because glass is involved in the confinement of light.
One final question: what the heck were the moderators smoking this time? Seems like good shit :-)
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Communications cycles (Score:1)
see the similarities?
coincidence?!?!? i think not ;)
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Re:No need to guess (Score:2)
As always, (Score:3)
Re:Makes me wonder... (Score:1)
"We've spent so much money, can't you get us some, um, extra-fast light or something?"
Nice
Re:Makes me wonder... (Score:2)
Or a very long tube, with perfectly mirrored insides, and a vacuum all the way down the centre - not exactly easy to manufacture, and it'd be pretty delicate.
Speed of light in glass is what, about 1/3rd speed of light in vacuum? So it's only a threefold increase anyway; you get more than that with clever use of multiple frequencies down the same fibre etc.
Discover article (Score:1)
Ligth traveling through fiber optics (Score:1)
Re:Home use? (Score:1)
B
Re:problem is... (Score:1)
The nice thing about cutting fiber is that the contamination ends right at the cut, not 30 feet up the pipe.
Next dumb question, what type of equipment would you hook up to a 1,000GB line?
B
Re:problem is... (Score:1)
Acutally, they won't. Qwest has empty conduit buried above their existing fiber network.
While fiber is expensive in relative terms, the optoelectronics are often 20x more expensive.
One more problem is power, running two sets of photonics equipment that are not interchangeable as opposed to one standardized piece of equipment doesn't make sense. Comapnies like Notel (r omitted on purpose) Lucent and Corvis are dumping huge amounts of capital into DWDM as opposed to telling their largest clients that their existing fiber systems are useless.
Want to make a leap in optical technology, develop a box that will deploy dialtone/DSL to a neighborhood off of a four fiber system (eight for SONET)
B
Re:Big Big Mirrors (Score:1)
Even better, build a huge Tesla Coil and beam death rays to each subscribers home!!!
Oh sh*t, we did that already, it's called Radio...
B
Flamebait
Re:OTDR (Score:1)
B
IoR (Score:1)
That tosses anything to do with IoR out the window since it is dealing entirely with reflection and wave propagation origination in the initial direction.
For those of you that were talking about a total vacuum in this cable, that's impossible. There will always be some particulates in the cable and desorption of gasses due to lack of pressure in most all materials. Even space has pressure. Although small.
It would help some to pump out the tube and it is not that tough to build a tube that withstands 14.7 psi.
Lets say at .375 in. diameter. you're only seeing about 17 pounds of force per inch. Not too hard at all to design.
The Big Payoff (Score:1)
What I would love to see is cheap reliable fiber IN the boxes. 1 TB per second to your lasercube, that's what I want. Storage being accessed at better than memory speeds now, oh mymymymy.
Re:Home use? (Score:1)
No need to guess (Score:1)
Anyone got a guess on the availability?
If you read the article and you make it all the way to the fourth paragraph, you'll find this:
"It is still early in the development of this new generation of optical fibers. Even the most advanced of the new materials remain several years from widespread commercial use."
Like holey fibers? (Score:1)
Re:See This Previous SlashDot Post... (Score:1)
Bad reflectors? (Score:1)
Ohmigod! I AM handsome after all!!
Cheap enough for the home? (Score:1)
But for your short distances (unless you live in a 5 acre house) you're better off with copper. Sorry to bust your bubble. Maybe, if you really want to go nuts, you could pick up some old surplus microwave guides. My dad has a pile of them and you can play with them like Lego (brand building blocks, for you Correctness-Nazis)
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Re:This story again? Yes.... (Score:1)
View the past through Slashdot-O-Scope! =)
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Re:Makes me wonder... (Score:1)
Hoover, Oreck, or Eureka?
Ok, that's bad... Not sure how you preserve a vacuum in something like that... Make the fibre in an airless production facility? Maybe NASA has one.
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Re:New technology (Score:1)
Yes, I can see how you wouldn't want to combine laser beans and a high fibre diet.
Surprise is a phart with lumps.
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Re:problem is... (Score:1)
Although I agree that that folks like Qwest will have to pay an arm and leg to replace existing cable, I believe that it's important to realize that this underlying economic argument is not true for all carriers. Some folks out there have multiple conduits -- 12 on all routes in the case of Level 3 -- which allows them to pull smaller fiber-count cables. When new generations of fiber come about, the new fiber is blown through an empty conduit (roughly a 1.25" pipe) at a very low incremental cost.
This way, one can take advantage of the new fiber systems as they become available. While fiber is expensive in relative terms, the optoelectronics are often 20x more expensive. Thus, with photonic band gap 'fiber' technologies, huge cost savings can be realized as hundreds of multiplexed lightpaths can transmitted without amplification.
Re:Cost (Score:1)
Big Big Mirrors (Score:1)
Wouldn't that be faster then a hollow fiber optic connection?
Maybe this is a bad idea with cloud cover and all
GAP?? Are you serious?? (Score:2)
First you have your GAP khakis, then GAP swings and finally GAP country line dances. Now they're invading the fibre optic cable market! I can't wait for that commercial. Somebody please make that company stop.
Re:Communications cycles (Score:1)
Re:One of the biggest problems... (Score:1)
Looking at the holes in the fiber that they show in the pictures (with a scale), each hole is about 5 microns in diameter. I would highly doubt that water would completely fill these holes.
The water pressure at whatever depth they were set at could probably determine how far in each hole the water may have been forced. They could simply cut the line well beyond that and splice in a new fiber. Of course, I assume that they would have to do this in an environment free of water.
Another alternative fiber structure (Score:1)
File this under "it seemed like a good idea" (Score:1)
One little problem -- it won't work. First, to get the light to propagate, you have to make the tube incredibly tiny. Second, to actually get it to move without loss, you have to magically suspend a rod down the middle of this microscopic cavity. Third, there is no way to actually build a perfect reflector. All materials absorb a little light, and these little bits add up.
Today's fibers can already go 50 miles or more without regeneration of the signal, and there's no reason to suspect these fibers would be any better.
Re:I thought this happens already... (Score:1)
Re:File this under "it seemed like a good idea" (Score:1)
However, undersea fiber is as thick as your arm, with all of the attendant packaging, and it's buried several feet under the ocean floor until it gets to the edge of the continental shelf.
Stepping on the hose? (Score:1)
See This Previous SlashDot Post... (Score:1)
Re:Communications cycles (Score:1)
Re:Thoughts on fibers (Score:2)
problem is... (Score:3)
Fiber is expensive as hell and many companies like QWEST already have existing dark fiber all over the place. Many corporations have yet taken measures to move unto those strands of unused fibers, and it would cost many companies an arm and leg to replace their cabling, especially when they haven't even used it yet. This is looking way into the future. Has anyone here actually upgraded to a fiber ethernet based network, or is everyone hoping. In reality its again a very expensive thing to do, cheap to think about, but expensive to do.
With companies like PSInet which is a big ass ISP coming near the brinks of bankruptcy, many companies are in a rush to SAVE money not run out to buy more equipment, upgrade, etc. I would like to see networks get faster, but is it a complete neccessity at this point?
Re:I thought this happens already... (Score:1)
can't keep a coherent signal..
hey that's me.. :-)
Re:Thoughts on fibers (Score:1)
Re:Makes me wonder... (Score:1)
From what he article said, you need a material around the transmission material (in this case, air) with a lower index of refraction to keep the light going along the transmission line. I'm not sure, but I would guess a perfect vacuum would have a very low refraction index, so the problem of finding a material with a lower index of refraction to surround the vacuum with would be even more difficult than with air.
fiber optics.....ummmmmmmmmm (Score:1)
Re:Makes me wonder... (Score:2)
I'm trying my best to contribute to this discussion by asking an honest question (and I've been getting nice replies, thanks all who responded). To me, the question seemed logical enough to ask.
Yes, I know that light travels through vaccuum in space. My question was whether science will ever lead us to exploit that. It seemed an interesting idea at the time that I posted it, and I wanted to see if other people had anything to say about it. It was a post which was on topic, and provoked some level of intelligent discussion (not flames).
Re:But can you step on it? (Score:1)
Pipe fitting (Score:1)
Re:File this under "it seemed like a good idea" (Score:1)
Re:FIRST PO5T (Score:1)
You have achieved something. Revel in it. Wallow in it. The fp is YOURS! Savor your triumph, untainted by uncertainty. It's a GOOD THING(TM).
Home use? (Score:4)
Considering you can put 100Gbps through 400kilomters on one strand of existing optical fiber, you're gonna have a completely fucked up home if you need more bandwidth than that.
That said, the article claims that this will "revolutionize the telecommunications industry" because it allows for longer-haul fibers without inline optical amplifiers.
That might be true, if we were using the existing fiber we have. But look at the people selling low-power in-line optical amplifiers - namely Corvis. Nobody's buying their shit. We have millions of miles of "dark fiber" in America - fiber that no one is leasing. In addition, no one is using the "long haul" capability provided by the new generation of companies such as Corvis - mainly because policing these long fibers for a break is expensive, in addition to the fact that in a store-and-forward network topology (like IP) you have to route at each hop, so there's no reason to go that far.
The only successful applications of long-haul fiberoptic technologies so far have been underwater trans-oceanic lines. and this technology may help with that. But revolutionize the telecommunications industry? FUD.
What would revolutionize the telco industry would be if Corporate America actually had applications they wanted to buy bandwidth for, and started doing it. Look at all the solid equipment providers with tanked stocks: lucent, cisco - the bandwidth explosion hasn't happened.
sigh. fud.
Re:Makes me wonder... (Score:1)
Re:Telportation? (Score:1)
Re:Thoughts on fibers, splicing. (Score:1)
Re:Makes me wonder... (Score:1)