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optical fibre
(redirected from glass fiber)

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optical fibre

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The major differences in construction between twisted pair (telephone), coaxial, and fibre optic cable.
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An electrical device used to amplify the pulses of light carried in optical fibres so that the information can be sent further.
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Optical fibre cable installation. Optical fibre technology, which transmits data by means of light pulses along hair-thin fibres, has come largely to replace metal cables for telecommunications.

Very fine, optically-pure glass fibre through which light can be reflected to transmit images or data from one end to the other. Although expensive to produce and install, optical fibres can carry more data than traditional cables, and are less susceptible to interference. Standard optical fibre transmitters can send up to 10 billion bits of information per second by switching a laser beam on and off.

Optical fibres are increasingly being used to replace metal communications cables, the messages being encoded as digital pulses of light rather than as fluctuating electric current. Research is investigating how optical fibres could replace wiring inside computers.

Bundles of optical fibres are also used in endoscopes to inspect otherwise inaccessible parts of machines or of the living body (see endoscopy).


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