A
new record for the fastest ever data transmission rate between a single
transmitter and receiver has been set by researchers in the UK, who
achieved a rate of 1.125 terabits per second using an optical
communications system.
"For comparison this is
almost 50,000 times greater than the average speed of a UK broadband
connection of 24 megabits per second (Mb/s), which is the current speed
defining 'superfast' broadband," said one of the researchers, Robert
Maher from University College London. "To give an example, the data rate
we have achieved would allow the entire HD Games of Thrones series to
be downloaded within 1 second."
Optical communications systems
allow for super-speedy data transmission by sending pulses of light
through an optical fibre instead of using an electric current to
transfer information. On the most basic level, it involves a
transmitter, such as a light-emitting diode, that converts and transmits
an electronic signal into a light signal, and a receiver, which
converts the light back into electricity.
The way Maher and his
colleagues set up their new system was to combine 15 different channels
through which to send the data, and each one carries an optical signal
of a different wavelength. Once the information reaches its destination,
they’re combined and fed into a single optical receiver with super-high
bandwidth for processing. The team dubs this 15 channel system a
"super-channel", and it’s the key to hitting such crazy transfer speeds.
"Using
high-bandwidth super-receivers enables us to receive an entire
super-channel in one go. Super-channels are becoming increasingly
important for core optical communications systems, which transfer bulk
data flows between large cities, countries or even continents," says
Maher.
"However, using a single receiver varies the levels of
performance of each optical sub-channel, so we had to finely optimise
both the modulation format and code rate for each optical channel
individually to maximise the net information data rate. This ultimately
resulted in us achieving the greatest information rate ever recorded
using a single receiver."
The details and have been published in
Scientific Reports, and while this is an awesome proof of concept for
exactly how much faster we could be transmitting data... yep, you
guessed it - it's not going to be changing your download speeds any time
soon.
This is because that crucial super-channel component is
not yet commercially available, so if Maher and co. want their new
system to be picked up by the companies that control our Internet,
they're going to have to show that it can achieve similar data rates in a
long-distance transmission scenario. And that's not going to be easy,
because optical signals are at risk of becoming distorted as they
journey through thousands of kilometres of optical fibres, and that's no
good for anyone.
So we've got the speeds, we just need to scale
the whole thing up. Hopefully I'll see you on the other side of that
1-second GoT download in the not-so-distant future.
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