Article,

Optical fibres in communications and measurement

.
(1984)

Abstract

Optical fibres are thin wires of glass which act as waveguides for light. Their action can be used to provide optical communications links which have enormous information-carrying capacity over large distances and which are also con<pletely immune from all kinds of electro-magnetic interference. Prospects for use in the CEGB are good and the possibili(v of a wholly CEGB-owned National Communications Network, using optical fibres, is being studied. The way in which light propagates within an optical fibre can be infiuenced by various kinds of external agencies and this fact can be used to devise a variety of measurement sensors based on optical fibres. Such sensors have the advantages of use of a dielectric insulating medium which is intrinsically safe and easy to install. They also interface easily to interference-free optical-fibre telemetry links. Prospects for the future include the use of non-linear optics to provide distributed optical-fibre measurement systems and the use of integrated opto-electronics in the development of fast processors for use in communications and measurement applications, and in the next generation of computers.

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