You hear about fiber-optic cables whenever people talk about the telephone system, the cable TV system or the Internet. Fiber-optic lines are strands of optically pure glass
as thin as a human hair that carry digital information over long
distances. They are also used in medical imaging and mechanical
engineering inspection.
In this article, we will show you how these tiny strands of glass transmit light and the fascinating way that these strands are made.
In this article, we will show you how these tiny strands of glass transmit light and the fascinating way that these strands are made.
History
Daniel Colladon first described this “light
fountain” or “light pipe” in an 1842 article titled On the reflections of a
ray of light inside a parabolic liquid stream. This particular illustration
comes from a later article by Colladon, in 1884.
Fiber
optics, though used extensively in the modern world, is a fairly simple, and
relatively old, technology. Guiding of light by refraction, the principle that
makes fiber optics possible, was first demonstrated by Daniel Colladon and Jacques Babinet
in Paris
in the early 1840s. John Tyndall included a demonstration of it in
his public lectures in London, 12 years later.[3]
Tyndall also wrote about the property of total internal reflection in an
introductory book about the nature of light in 1870: "When the light
passes from air into water, the refracted ray is bent towards the perpendicular...
When the ray passes from water to air it is bent from the
perpendicular... If the angle which the ray in water encloses with the
perpendicular to the surface be greater than 48 degrees, the ray will not quit
the water at all: it will be totally reflected at the surface.... The
angle which marks the limit where total reflection begins is called the
limiting angle of the medium. For water this angle is 48°27', for flint glass
it is 38°41', while for diamond it is 23°42'."[4][5]
Unpigmented human hairs have also been shown to act as an optical fiber.[6]
Practical
applications, such as close internal illumination during dentistry, appeared
early in the twentieth century. Image transmission through tubes was
demonstrated independently by the radio experimenter Clarence
Hansell and the television pioneer John Logie
Baird in the 1920s. The principle was first used for internal
medical examinations by Heinrich Lamm in the following decade. Modern
optical fibers, where the glass fiber is coated with a transparent cladding to
offer a more suitable refractive index, appeared later in the decade.[3]
Development then focused on fiber bundles for image transmission. Harold Hopkins
and Narinder Singh Kapany at Imperial
College in London achieved low-loss light transmission through a
75 cm long bundle which combined several thousand fibers. Their article
titled "A flexible fibrescope, using static scanning" was published
in the journal Nature in 1954.[7][8]
The first fiber optic semi-flexible gastroscope
was patented by Basil Hirschowitz, C. Wilbur Peters, and
Lawrence E. Curtiss, researchers at the University of Michigan, in 1956. In the process
of developing the gastroscope, Curtiss produced the first glass-clad fibers;
previous optical fibers had relied on air or impractical oils and waxes as the
low-index cladding material.
A variety
of other image transmission applications soon followed.
In 1880 Alexander Graham Bell and Sumner Tainter invented the 'Photophone'
at the Volta Laboratory in Washington, D.C., to
transmit voice signals over an optical beam.[9]
It was an advanced form of telecommunications, but subject to atmospheric
interferences and impractical until the secure transport of light that would be
offered by fiber-optical systems. In the late 19th and early 20th centuries,
light was guided through bent glass rods to illuminate body cavities.[10]
Jun-ichi Nishizawa, a Japanese scientist at Tohoku
University, also proposed the use of optical fibers for
communications in 1963, as stated in his book published in 2004 in India.[11]
Nishizawa invented other technologies that contributed to the development of
optical fiber communications, such as the graded-index optical fiber as a
channel for transmitting light from semiconductor lasers.[12][13]
The first working fiber-optical data transmission system was demonstrated by
German physicist Manfred Börner at Telefunken
Research Labs in Ulm in 1965, which was followed by the first patent
application for this technology in 1966.[14][15]
Charles K. Kao
and George A. Hockham of the British company Standard Telephones and Cables (STC)
were the first to promote the idea that the attenuation
in optical fibers could be reduced below 20 decibels
per kilometer (dB/km), making fibers a practical communication medium.[16]
They proposed that the attenuation in fibers available at the time was caused
by impurities that could be removed, rather than by fundamental physical
effects such as scattering. They correctly and systematically theorized the
light-loss properties for optical fiber, and pointed out the right material to
use for such fibers — silica glass with high purity. This discovery earned
Kao the Nobel Prize in Physics in 2009.[17]
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