Monday, March 23, 2020
Fiber Optics Essays - Optical Fiber, Fiber Optics,
  Fiber Optics    Fiber optics is a branch of optics concerning the transmission of light by means  of optical fibers, which are thin strands of glass or other optically  transparent materials. Optical fibers can be used to guide light--which is  electromagnetic radiation in a certain frequency range--in much the same way  that metal wave guides or coaxial cables can be used to guide lower-frequency  electromagnetic radiation. Optical Fiber An optical fiber is usually circular in  cross section and consists of a core and cladding. An optical fiber for  communication applications is typically between about 0.1 and 0.2mm (0.004 and    0.008 in) in diameter. In order that the light waves be guided by the fiber, the  core must have a higher index of refraction than the cladding. One such fiber is  called a step-index fiber because the index changes abruptly at the interface  between the core and the cladding. An important variation of this structure is  the graded-index fiber, so called because the index of refraction decreases  smoothly outward from the center with no abrupt step. Transmission of Light In  the step-index fiber, the light wave is guided by a process called total  internal reflection. Only rays that have an angle of incidence at the  core-cladding interface greater than the critical angle will be reflected back  into the core and thus guided by the fiber. Some rays follow a longer path  through the fiber than do others. Thus a pulse of energy entering the fiber  undergoes dispersion. This effect limits the bandwidth of the fiber and reduces  the amount of information it can transmit. This undesirable feature can be  partly overcome by the use of graded-index fibers of proper design. Applications    Fiber optics is used in several areas of telecommunications. Advantages of  optical fibers include their wide bandwidth, low attenuation, lightness, small  cross section, and non-conductivity of electricity. In telephone systems they  can provide communication channels to customers and wideband facilities for  interconnecting switching offices. Because they are non-conducting, they can be  used to provide telecommunications services to locations in electrically hostile  environments, such as electric power stations. Because they are completely  immune to induced currents from external electromagnetic fields, optical fibers  are also useful in environments where electrical noise exists, such as hospitals  and factories. Finally, their lightness makes them attractive for use in  aircraft and spacecraft as well as in portable communications systems required  for tactical military applications. All these properties make them desirable for  interconnecting computers and other sophisticated electronic equipment. In  communication-system applications, individual fibers usually are used to guide  light waves. Other applications employ bundles of fibers. One such application  is the transmission of light for illumination. Fibers used for this purpose need  not have the cladding or the index gradient of single-fiber light guides because  the index step at the glass-air interface serves to guide the light. Another  application of fiber bundles is the transmission of images. For this application  the fibers must be arranged in the bundle in a coherent fashion. By arranging  the locations of the fibers at one end (the output) of the bundle in certain  ways with respect to their location at the other end (the input), such functions  as magnification, inversion, rotation, distortion, and scrambling of the image  can be performed. Bundles of this type can be used for viewing otherwise  inaccessible areas, an example being the physician's endoscope. In order to  achieve high resolution, fibers with diameters as small as 0.02 mm (0.0008 in)  are used in these applications. Fiber bundles are also used in photography,  spectroscopy, and image processing.    
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