Fiber optic researchers showcase speeds 4.5 million times faster than average home broadband

Jimmy2x

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The big picture: The ability to move massive amounts of data as quickly as possible continues to become more critical to our everyday lives. Earlier this month, researchers published the results of an experiment that could help increase transmission speeds exponentially using existing fiber optic infrastructure.

Researchers from Aston University in the UK have successfully transmitted data across standard fiber optics at 301,000,000 megabits per second, shattering speeds included in broadband performance reports published by Ofcom in 2023. The enormous increase in speed and capability is thanks to previously unused wavelengths transmitted across standard fiber optic systems.

Computers transmit information through fiber optics by sending light signals across an extremely thin plastic or glass fiber called the core. These transmissions typically use specific light wavelengths of 850, 1300, and 1550 nanometers to carry information along the line. To achieve the exponential increase in speed, Aston's Institute of Photonic Technologies Professor Wladek Forysiak worked closely with Dr. Ian Phillips to utilize wavelength bands previously unused in today's fiber optic systems.

The two most commonly used wavelengths in fiber communications are the conventional band (C-band) and the long-wavelength band (L-band). The L-band is used when the C-band can't meet typical bandwidth requirements.

Forsiak and Phillips successfully used two additional spectral bands, the extended wavelength band (E-band) and the short wavelength band (S-band), to augment the available capacity of the more common C and L bands. The researchers had to develop new optical amplifiers and optical gain equalizers to effectively use these additional wavelength bands.

Leveraging the additional E and S bands produces exceptionally significant results. As the technology develops, providers may one day be able to step up data delivery capabilities far beyond what is possible today without the added cost of replacing their entire fiber infrastructure.

While the speed rate achieved here is impressive, it's not the fastest transmission ever achieved. Two years ago, Japanese researchers from the National Institute of Information and Communications Technology (NICT) set a data-rate world record after reaching transmission speeds of 1.02 petabits per second, or 1,020,000,000 megabits per second. However, the NICT researchers employed a custom cable using four cores rather than a standard single-core line.

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You cannot use these other wavelengths for long distance data. For long haul you have to use 1550nm because the optical fibre has it's minimum loss at this wavelength and it rapidly increases away from that wavelength. Otherwise you start having to put optical amplifers every few km to boost the signal. For for a short haul though things are lot different.

The holey grail would be non-linear optical fibres that support solitons for data transfer, then you don't need amplifiers.
 
This reminds me of one of those battery article longevity claims that will never see the light of day in our lifetime. Unless you live in a lab
 
You cannot use these other wavelengths for long distance data. For long haul you have to use 1550nm because the optical fibre has it's minimum loss at this wavelength and it rapidly increases away from that wavelength. Otherwise you start having to put optical amplifers every few km to boost the signal. For for a short haul though things are lot different.

The holey grail would be non-linear optical fibres that support solitons for data transfer, then you don't need amplifiers.
But that is where the most demand is. You do not need to transfer gazillion bytes under the ocean, Youtube, Netflix build their servers for cat videos and low quality shows where people are, same countries and regions. I think it would be great even if it does not work for very long distances.
 
Considering just how many countries have IP's that regularly offer 1Gb or faster service at less than our standard speed costs you would think the Congress would mandate that service here, especially since most of those other countries are not nearly as technology as advanced as the US. One simple law that barred politicians from accepting any donations other than private citizens and barred PAC's would put an end to this foolishness .....
 
Considering just how many countries have IP's that regularly offer 1Gb or faster service at less than our standard speed costs you would think the Congress would mandate that service here, especially since most of those other countries are not nearly as technology as advanced as the US. One simple law that barred politicians from accepting any donations other than private citizens and barred PAC's would put an end to this foolishness .....
In order to do that all ISP's in the U.S or the U.K would have to give up ownership of the FTTH network and hand it over to a seperate company. Take my country for instance our fiber network is owned by a Private company in conjunction with our govt they rolled out the FTTH to almost all homes in NZ and all the ISP's here lease access to it with profits going to upgrade and maintain the network so it has gone from topping out at 1Gb/500Mb to 8Gb/8Gb with a true no cap limit on data
 
Is Elons Starlink network not available to you I'd bet it is

Starlink average download speed in the US is around 105mbps, so right about 13MBps...but upload drops to less than 2 MBps.

Of course is the poster meant mbps, starlink 5G, or even LTE-LAA could be a good option for a speed upgrade, if one of those covers him, though I would think starlink probably comes with the most weather related issues.
 
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