The
use of Fiber Optics was generally not available until
1970 when Corning Glass Works was able to produce a
fiber with a loss of 20 dB/km. That is, 1% of the light
would remain after traveling 1 km. It was recognized
that optical fiber would be feasible for telecommunication
transmission only if glass could be developed so pure
that attenuation would be 20 dB/km or less. Today's
optical fiber attenuation ranges from 0.5 dB/km to 1000
dB/km depending on the optical fiber used. Attenuation
limits are based on intended application.
The applications of optical fiber communications
have increased at a rapid rate, since the first commercial
installation of a Fiber Optic system in 1977. Telephone
companies began early on, replacing their old copper
wire systems with optical fiber lines. Today's telephone
companies use optical fiber throughout their system
as the backbone architecture and as the long-distance
connection between city phone systems.
Local Area Networks (LAN) is a collective
group of computers, or computer systems, connected to
each other allowing for shared program software or databases.
Colleges, universities, office buildings, and industrial
plants, just to name a few, all make use of optical
fiber within their LAN systems.
Power companies utilize Fiber Optics
in their communication systems and most already have
Fiber Optic communication systems in use for monitoring
their power grid systems. |