
Techniques
for guiding light energy along special types of optical conductors are under
active investigation at Standard Telecommunication Laboratories Limited,
Harlow. Short distance experimental runs of these optical waveguides have
been operated satisfactorily. They have exhibited an information-carrying
capacity of one Gigacycle, which is equivalent to
about
200
television channels or over 200,000 telephone channels.
One type of conductor successfully operated was
described by
Dr C. Kao at an IEE meeting today (27th January), It consists of a glass
core about three or four microns in diameter, clad with a coaxial layer
of
another glass having a refractive index smaller than that of the core by
about
one per cent, to a total diameter of three to four hundred microns.
Surface
optical waves can then be propagated along the interface between the two
types of glass. Such a fibre is relatively strong, can be easily
supported,
and the guiding surface is
protected from external influences. It is capable
of carrying 10 m W of power,
and has such a low mechanical bending radius
as virtually to make it completely flexible.
A
second approach at STL to the loss problem has been to use an
extremely thin film for the guide, supported on U-shaped channel
material about
one centimetre across. The wave is then carried at the interface
between the
film and surrounding air, and if, for an operating wavelength of 1
micron, the
film is 0.1 micron thick, then it carries about one per cent of the
energy of
the wave, so that the effective loss is only about one per cent of that
in a fibre
guide of similar material.
Special Notes to Editors'
2.
The potential of coherent light (i.e. the type produced by lasers,
lasing
gallium arsenide diodes, etc.) as a communication medium is well-known.
The problem of using such light to communicate between remote points,
however,
remains unsolved. A direct beam may be obstructed by the atmosphere, and
is in any case limited by the visible horizon. Balloons, towers, etc.,
are
possible but not probable. Direct beams are therefore likely to be
restricted,
for long distance work, to outer space.
Geoffrey Charlish
190 Strand,