"Father of Fiber Optics" Wins Nobel Prize 74
alphadogg writes "Charles Kao, whose work in the 1960s laid the foundation for today's long-distance fiber-optic networks, has won a share of this year's Nobel Prize in Physics (PDF). Kao, sometimes referred to as the 'father of fiber-optic communications,' was formally honored by the Nobel Foundation in Stockholm, Sweden 'for groundbreaking achievements concerning the transmission of light in fibers for optical communication.' Kao's breakthrough discovery in 1966 was to determine how to transmit light over long distances using ultrapure optical glass fibers. This would extend the distance of such transmissions to 62 miles vs. the mere 65 feet allowed under previous technology held back by impurities. The first ultrapure fiber was created in 1970."
First Post (Score:5, Funny)
At least it would have been if I had a fiber optic network.
No love for the inventors of the CCD? (Score:5, Informative)
These guys [about.com] also got the Nobel prize this year for their work on the CCD. That's worth a mention too, I think!
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We talked about the nobel for work on telomeres yesterday [slashdot.org]. Maybe slashdot editors have decided to string the nobel topics out. Just one a day, otherwise we'll get too excited.
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because Lucy never allowed him to kick the football?
wait.. what?
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OK then.
*claps hands*.
Re:No love for the inventors of the CCD? (Score:5, Funny)
Seriously. If it wasn't for them, we wouldn't have the glut of amateur porn that's available to us today.
God bless you, sirs.
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The Nobel is for work that changed our understanding of the subject in a significant way. You can only accurately judge that a couple of decades after it was originally published. A new theor
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George Smith is an alum of my school. Kind of a big deal here. They did good work, they almost single-handedly created an industry.
Think about it. Without the invention of the CCD, we'd take pictures and have them developed. Now we can take thousands upon thousands of pictures on a single 'roll' and print them a few seconds after they're taken. I think it's safe to say that the CCD revolutionized photography, at least for amateurs.
62 miles? (Score:3, Insightful)
Come on guys. We are talking about Science here. Use the system used by any scientist and 95% of the world population. 100km!
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100km!
The pdf uses SI, read that. And while we're off-topic, guess what Iceweasel does by default when it encounters a popup: it pops up a message telling me it blocked it. And when I disable it, it pops up another message telling me all about it.
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You know, it really doesn't matter. It's not like you don't know how to convert the units if you need to convert them... and you probably don't need to know them anyway.
But then, I guess if you ignored "problems" that aren't really problematic, you wouldn't have this beautiful outlet for self-righteous whining*.
*The irony of saying this isn't lost on me, but I'm sick enough of seeing people fucking complain about which arbitrarily-defined system of measurement to use that I'm willing to make myself look a b
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It's actually worse in this case because the numbers chosen (62 miles vs 100) give misleading precision. It's just the result of a reporter punching numbers in a calculator, but he did change the content.
PS: I find it funny, albeit regrettable, that every time someone on Slashdot points out an inappropriate use of imperial measurements there is always a backlash of people who have to defend and justify them, trying to argue that measurements are all arbitrary and the systems are equally useful, when clearly
Why so long? (Score:5, Interesting)
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Because, as we all know, the execs at AT&T and other companies are the ones who determine the receptors of Nobel prizes.
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Re:Why so long? (Score:5, Insightful)
It's a truism that you get your Nobel 20 to 30 years after the groundbreaking work that earned it. After all, they couldn't give it to you back then, 'cause back then it was going to the people who earned it 20 to 30 years before *that*.
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How about if there was one year where there were multiple breakthroughs? Wouldn't that make a massive backlog? This is only slightly more important then the Academy Awards.
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20-30 != 43. The criticism is valid, this is an old (even by Nobel standards), really important piece of research that should have been recognized 10 years ago.
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Nobel was known for explosives; however, his committee is known to move like molasses.
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Which also are known to explode [wikipedia.org].
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Thanks for the citation. Maybe that was mole asses.
--
Proper prior preparation positively prevents percussive polysaccharides.
Re:Why so long? (Score:4, Insightful)
I imagine they also want some time to see if the discoveries prove to be truly useful in the long term. I'm sure there was plenty of neat stuff being done in the 60s/70s that was neat at the time but how much of it are we still using? (I know there's plenty, my point is there's also plenty that we aren't.) Also, they want to make sure they don't wind up giving the prize to the inventors of Thalidomide [wikipedia.org] or anything.
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And maybe time will prove it useful. For now, it's better known as "the biggest medical tragedy of modern times."
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Actually I am surprised at this win. Not that it wasn't great but Nobel's tend to go more theoretical work than this. Making very pure fibers seems more engineering than science to me.
I do think this is a good choice but I think the reason it took so long was that really only now did the committee understand just how important that was. Heck Jack Kilby and Robert Noyce never got one and they where the fathers of the integrated circuit.
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Sorry my bad Kilby did get his in 2000. Noyce died in 90 so he never got one.
Charles Kao != Father of Fiber Optics (Score:5, Interesting)
or so the comment in the article says
"Father of Fiber Optics" is not Kao but Narinder Singh Kapany. http://www.explainthatstuff.com/fiberoptics.html [explainthatstuff.com] http://www.google.ca/search?hl=en&source=hp&q=Father+of+Fiber+Optics&btnG=Google+Search&meta=&aq=f&oq= [google.ca] I can`t believe news didn`t name him
From one of the linked articles,
1950s: In London, England, Indian physicist Narinder Kapany (1927â") and British physicist Harold Hopkins (1918â"1994) managed to send a simple picture down a light pipe made from thousands of glass fibers. After publishing many scientific papers, Kapany earned a reputation as the "father of fiber optics."
1960s: Chinese-born US physicist Charles Kao (1933â") figured out how to make a very pure fiber-optic cable that can carry telephone signals over long distances.
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Maybe "Father of Long Range Fiber Optics" or "Father of Practical Fiber Optics"?
62 miles in the 70's (Score:5, Interesting)
That's pretty impressive. Anyone have a good link on what today's longest fiber's are capable of? I'm not talking about max distance with repeaters or anything. I'm talking about the max distance for a single fiber from beginning to end. Most of what Google gives is just information about the longest cables that presumably start and stop in many different locations/countries...
Re:62 miles in the 70's (Score:5, Informative)
This is at 2.5 Gbps.
I don't know if that's a lot or not, but that's around where we max out.
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Anyone have a good link on what today's longest fiber's are capable of?
When I posted this I was thinking in my head "distance" but i failed to mention that.
Other capabilities might be interesting as well, such as max bandwidth for a single optic cable, ect...
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We run 40Gbps rings in a metro area network. That's one wavelength. There's also a 10Gbps wavelength and several 1Gbps rings as well. We still have 62 wavelengths (theoretically, although maybe not supported by our equipment) available.
http://www.fujitsu.com/us/news/pr/fnc_20090608.html [fujitsu.com]
AM fiber is capable of sending all RF spectrum from 50MHz to 870MHz over one fiber. Next generation transmitters and receivers will run up to 1GHz or more.
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that's what repeaters are made of.
that, and a laser to pump the energy needed for amplification, a power supply for the laser, (long!) wires for the power supply....
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No, no, optical repeaters are deployed reasonably often- I used to work for a company that made them. They're not quite as good in some ways as repeaters that turn the signal back into electricity and then back into light again, because they don't retime the signal, so if you go far enough down the fibre the bits in the signal sort of blur together (in several various ways). You can get around that though by lowering the data rate, so I don't think there's an upper limit on distance with pure optical paths.
Transmission. (Score:4, Funny)
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Fiber optics took about 20 years to arrive (Score:4, Informative)
I did my MSEE thesis in 1981, working on mono-mode optical fibers. This was still pretty cutting edge at the time, but the first semi-automatic splicing units had started to arrive.
The most fascinating feature of very pure optical fibers is that they have two minima not too far apart:
At around 1200 nm the frequency dispersion is very close to zero, which means that a single pulse traveling along the fiber will suffer minimum smearing, which maximizes the possible bandwidth.
At around 1500 nm the optical damping (i.e. sum of scattering & absorption) has a minimum, which means that by using this frequency you can maximize the distance between repeaters.
Anyway, it took about 20 years (i.e. around 2001) before mono-mode fibers become standard in all new installations here in Norway, it seems like this is the normal time to go from lab prototypes to SOP.
Terje
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Yeah, I could also never understand what they were up to with this crazy guy and his photoelectric effect!
Sadly, (Score:1)
Shares of the Nobel Prize (Score:4, Insightful)
If this goes on, in a few years they'll be giving hundredth of the prize...
Why not go back to the days where the prize was given to a single person that embodied a change?
And maybe something modern as well instead of some 50 years old stuff...
Re:Shares of the Nobel Prize (Score:4, Informative)
Invented by aliens. (Score:3, Funny)
I'm pretty sure I heard on Art Bell that fiber optics weren't invented on Earth. They were discovered in the Roswell crash. Kao should return this prize.
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Art bell is still alive?
Congratulations, winners. (Score:1)
Why 62 miles? (Score:1)
Why not 63 or 64 miles? or 58?
Something to do with the speed of light?
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Because 100km is nice round number that lose its meaning when converted to outdated units.
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