6
   

What does "310 metres" mean? 310 more metres?

 
 
Reply Mon 25 Mar, 2013 12:24 am

Context:

Information superhighway approaches light speed
18:00 24 March 2013 by Jacob Aron
Nothing moves faster than light in a vacuum, but large volumes of data can now travel at 99.7 per cent of this ultimate speed limit.

In glass optical fibres, light travels 31 per cent slower than in a vacuum. Hollowing them out so that most of the light travels through air speeds things up. But these hollow fibres are a poor replacement as light scatters at the glass-air interface, limiting the number of wavelengths, and therefore the volume of data, transmitted at once.

Now Francesco Poletti and colleagues at the University of Southampton, UK, have made fibres with an ultra-thin glass rim, enabling a much wider band of wavelengths to travel at high speed at once. The team's record is a 73.7 terabit per second transmission over 310 metres, a 15,000-fold increase over ordinary hollow fibres.

"Previous fibres either have higher bandwidth but high loss, or lower loss but narrower bandwidth," says Poletti. "We've achieved both in the same fibre."

Journal reference: Nature Photonics, DOI: 10.1038/nphoton.2013.45

More:
http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn23309-information-superhighway-approaches-light-speed.html
 
View best answer, chosen by oristarA
roger
 
  2  
Reply Mon 25 Mar, 2013 01:07 am
@oristarA,
It looks more like the test was actually conducted over a total distance of 310 metres.
0 Replies
 
MontereyJack
 
  2  
Reply Mon 25 Mar, 2013 01:14 am
agreed. signal originated at one end and was received 310 meters away, along their fiber with the thin glass rim.
0 Replies
 
oristarA
 
  1  
Reply Mon 25 Mar, 2013 09:03 am
Thank you.
So   means more here?
MontereyJack
  Selected Answer
 
  3  
Reply Mon 25 Mar, 2013 09:08 am
No. It does NOT mean more. It is the length over which their experiment took place. If you drive a car one lap around a 2km race track, you do not drive 2km MORE, you just drive 2km. They sent and measured their test signal over a total distance of 310 meters, not 310 meters more.
oristarA
 
  0  
Reply Mon 25 Mar, 2013 10:16 am
@MontereyJack,
MontereyJack wrote:

No. It does NOT mean more. It is the length over which their experiment took place. If you drive a car one lap around a 2km race track, you do not drive 2km MORE, you just drive 2km. They sent and measured their test signal over a total distance of 310 meters, not 310 meters more.


So   is the symbol of circle or circuit?
0 Replies
 
roger
 
  1  
Reply Mon 25 Mar, 2013 12:42 pm
Is there more than one person using the oristarA account?
0 Replies
 
JTT
 
  1  
Reply Mon 25 Mar, 2013 09:28 pm
@oristarA,
Quote:
So   means more here?


After 'So', there is a gap. There is also a gap after 'So' in,

Post: # 5,286,903 where you replied to Monterey Jack.

So   is the symbol of circle or circuit?

Is it possible that there is a symbol missing for us that you have put in the gap/that you see in that gap in your postings?
MontereyJack
 
  1  
Reply Mon 25 Mar, 2013 10:14 pm
When I saw the post originally there was a small rectangle the size of a letter in what is now empty space, so, yes, something was there originally that somehow didn't make it thru. Don't know what it was a place-holder for.
JTT
 
  1  
Reply Mon 25 Mar, 2013 10:30 pm
@MontereyJack,
The thot plickens.
0 Replies
 
oristarA
 
  1  
Reply Tue 26 Mar, 2013 12:58 am
@JTT,
JTT wrote:

Quote:
So   means more here?


After 'So', there is a gap. There is also a gap after 'So' in,

Post: # 5,286,903 where you replied to Monterey Jack.

So   is the symbol of circle or circuit?

Is it possible that there is a symbol missing for us that you have put in the gap/that you see in that gap in your postings?


I've posted the link to the original source in the OP. Again:
http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn23309-information-superhighway-approaches-light-speed.html
0 Replies
 
Walter Hinteler
 
  1  
Reply Tue 26 Mar, 2013 01:43 am
@MontereyJack,
I'd looked at the original before: there is no symbol:
Quote:
http://i45.tinypic.com/29z3aq1.jpg
roger
 
  1  
Reply Tue 26 Mar, 2013 01:50 am
@Walter Hinteler,
I looked again, too.
0 Replies
 
MontereyJack
 
  1  
Reply Tue 26 Mar, 2013 08:21 am
actually the gap in question was in oristar's query, not the cited article
oristarA
 
  1  
Reply Tue 26 Mar, 2013 11:31 am
@MontereyJack,
MontereyJack wrote:

actually the gap in question was in oristar's query, not the cited article


Oh no. I've got the screenshot that can tell the truth but all picuploaders online failed me (and alas, A2K doesn't have the function as well).

ehBeth
 
  1  
Reply Tue 26 Mar, 2013 11:39 am
@oristarA,
Where do you see the symbol in the original article?
Walter Hinteler
 
  1  
Reply Wed 27 Mar, 2013 12:10 pm
@ehBeth,
Just wondering, if and how this will be resolved.
0 Replies
 
oristarA
 
  1  
Reply Wed 27 Mar, 2013 11:40 pm
@Walter Hinteler,
Walter Hinteler wrote:

I'd looked at the original before: there is no symbol:
Quote:
http://i45.tinypic.com/29z3aq1.jpg



Well, please look at this version:

http://i47.tinypic.com/k198ae.jpg
0 Replies
 
MontereyJack
 
  1  
Reply Thu 28 Mar, 2013 12:52 am
okay, there's definitely something there, but it's nothing I've ever seen before. the only symbol for a circle I know of offhand is, um, a circle, with a dot at the centerpoint, which that isn't.
Walter Hinteler
 
  1  
Reply Thu 28 Mar, 2013 01:55 am
@MontereyJack,
I wonder, why I didn't/don't see it, neither today nor before when I go to that site.
 

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