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Data Delivery Rates 4.5 MILLION TIMES FASTER Than Average Broadband Achieved In Major Fiber Optic Breakthrough
The Debrief ^ | APRIL 8, 2024 | MICAH HANKS

Posted on 04/09/2024 12:01:17 PM PDT by Red Badger

The fastest data delivery rate ever achieved using specific wavelength bands in fiber optic technology has been reported by an international team of researchers, who say they sent information 4.5 million times faster than the average home broadband will allow.

According to researchers at Aston University in Birmingham, England, who participated in the experiment, a series of new technologies they developed allowed them to successfully transfer data at an astonishing rate of 301 terabits (301,000,000 megabits) per second.

Remarkably, the Aston team says the breakthrough that achieved these impressive data transfer rates used only standard optical fiber.

The team says their breakthrough paves the way toward greener solutions by allowing the transfer of larger amounts of information without the use of additional optical fiber.

A BREAKTHROUGH IN BROADBAND

According to 2023 data, in the United States, the median download speed of fixed broadband clocked in at around 213.75 Mbps, making it the 6th fastest in the world. Mobile Broadband in the U.S. is, on average, close to 97.09 Mbps, the 15th fastest.

In the UK, a home broadband performance report published last September by the Office of Communications, or Offcom, said the average broadband speed is 69.4 Mbps.

“Our research shows that average download speeds for home broadband have continued to increase,” Offcom said in a report issued last year, adding that the current 69.4 Mbps figure represents “a 17% increase year-on-year, as people have upgraded to higher-bandwidth services, including full-fibre connections.”

Enter Dr Ian Phillips and Wladek Forysiak, a professor at Aston’s Institute of Photonic Technologies, both of whom participated in the team’s efforts to see whether the limits of data transmission using standard optical fiber were being vastly underutilized.

Collaborating with researchers at Nokia Bell Labs in the USA and Japan’s National Institute of Information and Communications Technology (NICT), the team found that opening additional wavelength bands that were previously unused in optical fiber systems has unleashed a tremendous untapped potential that could revolutionize fiber data transfer.

Using different wavelengths can be compared to various colors of light that are transmitted using optical fiber, where in the past only one or two colors were used as opposed to the entire color spectrum available.

With an ever-increasing demand for data, the new technology is expected to upend how optical fiber data transfer is used while reducing the need for installment of additional fiber by opening up the full potential of cables already in use.

UNLEASHING FIBEROPTICS’ FULL POTENTIAL

The team’s breakthrough was made with the help of a series of new optical technologies that allowed them to better leverage the full capabilities of optical fiber.

Fiberoptics relies on transferring information through small flexible fibers of glass or other transparent solids that carry information using light. At the heart of the team’s breakthrough were devices called optical amplifiers, along with newly developed optical gain equalizers they used to access them and an optical processor used as a management device.

“Broadly speaking, data was sent via an optical fiber like a home or office internet connection,” said Phillips, who led the development of the new optical processor the team used.

Phillips says that compared to the commercially available C and L-bands, the team used two additional spectral bands, the E and S-bands, which had not previously been used for such purposes.

“Such bands traditionally haven’t been required because the C- and L-bands could deliver the required capacity to meet consumer needs,” Phillips said in a statement.

The E-band occupies the space immediately adjacent to the C-band in the electromagnetic spectrum. Although it has previously been largely ignored since C and L-bands alone have been capable of meeting consumer demand, and because emulation of E-band channels in a controlled manner was a technological limitation that researchers hadn’t yet overcome.

TAPPING THE E-BAND, AND BEYOND

In recent years, researchers like Phillips have been focusing on ways optical amplifiers could be developed to allow operation in the E-band. This untapped region is close to three times as wide as the C-band.

“Before the development of our device, no one had been able to properly emulate the E-band channels in a controlled way,” Phillips said.

Professor Forysiak says that the achievement of a new device that allowed the team to emulate E-band channels greatly increased the transmission capacity of the network. This breakthrough, he says, could greatly improve users’ connections while also expanding accessibility without implementing additional optic fiber architecture.

“This groundbreaking accomplishment highlights the crucial role of advancing optical fiber technology in revolutionizing communication networks for faster and more reliable data transmission,” Forysiak said.

Beyond just the controlled emulation of the E-band, Forysiak says that utilizing additional bands like the L and S-bands will also help reduce the costs for users, in addition to providing an environmentally friendly solution that is still able to meet steadily growing broadband needs.

“It is also a ‘greener solution’ than deploying more, newer fibers and cables,” Forysiak said, “since it makes greater use of the existing deployed fiber network, increasing its capacity to carry data and prolonging its useful life & commercial value.”

Phillips, Forysiak, and their collaborators’ results were detailed in a paper presented at the European Conference on Optical Communication (ECOC) held in Glasgow last October.

The team’s paper was published in March by the Institute of Engineering and Technology.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Computers/Internet; History; Military/Veterans
KEYWORDS: broadband; nokiabelllabs
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To: Red Badger

If used throughout (in and out of) all telecommunicating devices, it could save (displace) tons of copper that is now being used.


21 posted on 04/09/2024 1:16:25 PM PDT by Wuli ( )
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To: Dead Corpse

Patent probably not finalized yet................


22 posted on 04/09/2024 1:17:40 PM PDT by Red Badger (Homeless veterans camp in the streets while illegals are put up in 5 Star hotels....................)
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To: Red Badger

Fiber is expensive, verizon had to cut back on expansion because of earnings pressure. I believe they may be starting to do more transmission lines once again.


23 posted on 04/09/2024 1:20:25 PM PDT by 1Old Pro
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To: 1Old Pro

Copper is expensive too and people will steal it................


24 posted on 04/09/2024 1:21:29 PM PDT by Red Badger (Homeless veterans camp in the streets while illegals are put up in 5 Star hotels....................)
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To: Red Badger

I work with some serious enterprise stuff, and I don’t know of any equipment that can send or receive data anywhere near that fast, ot even the internal memory bus.


25 posted on 04/09/2024 1:22:30 PM PDT by Dr. Sivana
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To: Red Badger

...but you will likely see only 13bps on your modem still, as always.


26 posted on 04/09/2024 2:02:01 PM PDT by If You Want It Fixed - Fix It
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To: Red Badger
Was looking for the Research PDF so I could nerd out on some hard science content. :-)

I'm in IT as a career, so... things like this can have an impact on what I do.

Not so ironically... I have a client that could use this. Print company... having issues running Zoom due to... limited bandwidth on their ISP connections. They are maxing out their outbound pipe with more than 4-5 people on a Zoom meeting at once. We tried to tell them that Comcast broadband is fine if you are only downloading data... but upstream is very limited for what they are paying for...

27 posted on 04/09/2024 2:11:16 PM PDT by Dead Corpse (A Psalm in napalm...)
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To: Red Badger

It’s greener


28 posted on 04/09/2024 2:16:45 PM PDT by mowowie
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To: Red Badger

Greed for speed...
That’s me!

I’m from the era when “speed” was accomplished by grabbing the stack of punch cards and running fast as hell across the campus to the computer facility...

Then waiting for days until I had to run fast as hell back to the computer facility to pick up 40-lbs of printouts and run fast as hell back to the physics department...


29 posted on 04/09/2024 3:10:23 PM PDT by SuperLuminal ( Where is Samuel Adams when we so desperately need him)
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To: wally_bert

Yep- they will claim that it uses too much power to send all that info, and that it is ‘contributing to climate change’, and that is what is causing blackouts (instead of blaming their electric car mandates)


30 posted on 04/09/2024 7:06:31 PM PDT by Bob434
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To: Red Badger

Of course, that’ll make it possible to go broke downloading every movie and audio recording ever made, in one day. :^)


31 posted on 04/09/2024 7:52:18 PM PDT by SunkenCiv (Putin should skip ahead to where he kills himself in the bunker.)
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To: Red Badger

I started with a 300bd and a cassette player to save/load :/


32 posted on 04/10/2024 1:19:04 AM PDT by Bikkuri (I am proud to be a PureBlood.)
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To: Dead Corpse

For multiple Zoomers they will have to go direct satellite like the big guys................


33 posted on 04/10/2024 5:25:57 AM PDT by Red Badger (Homeless veterans camp in the streets while illegals are put up in 5 Star hotels....................)
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To: mowowie

34 posted on 04/10/2024 5:28:05 AM PDT by Red Badger (Homeless veterans camp in the streets while illegals are put up in 5 Star hotels....................)
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To: Bikkuri

Yep!....................


35 posted on 04/10/2024 5:35:43 AM PDT by Red Badger (Homeless veterans camp in the streets while illegals are put up in 5 Star hotels....................)
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To: SuperLuminal

I remember the job want-ads back in those days were full of advertisements for ‘key-punch operators’............


36 posted on 04/10/2024 5:48:01 AM PDT by Red Badger (Homeless veterans camp in the streets while illegals are put up in 5 Star hotels....................)
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To: jeffc

IMO it’s like DSL for fiber. Adding two additional wave lengths (of shorter signal) to the transmission bus. It’ll be deployed into high traffic/density areas. Doubt it won’t be deployed outside that for a while. Maybe when 2D 3D display comes of age.


37 posted on 04/10/2024 5:49:37 AM PDT by Justa
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To: wally_bert

Routers for one bottleneck. How do you buffer at the router choke point?


38 posted on 04/10/2024 5:59:35 AM PDT by KC Burke
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To: Bikkuri

D . We is old aren’t we , load a page and go get a cup of coffee before it all loaded.....


39 posted on 04/10/2024 6:39:05 AM PDT by piroque ("When the SHTF I'm gonna hunker down until all those idiots kill each other. " )
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To: piroque

Lol ;)

More like take a shower while we wait....


40 posted on 04/10/2024 1:56:11 PM PDT by Bikkuri (I am proud to be a PureBlood.)
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