1

Suppose i had a fiber optic link from one side of the planet to the other side of the planet.

Is it safe to say, that with current technology, the latency of communication can never be reduced?

Understand that a fiber optic cable is not a perfect medium thus data only travels close to the speed of light.

Also lets consider that i will not be drilling a hole thru the center of the earth and it is just running along the ocean and or land.

Update: Thank you all who responded. It's a little saddening that current technology has this limitation. In the mean time I will consider CDNs and some sort of geo load balancing. Cheers!

HopelessN00b
  • 53,385
  • 32
  • 133
  • 208
JavaRocky
  • 481
  • 2
  • 4
  • 15
  • Jerry Mayers raised an interesting point that the protocol matters too. But baring that point for now and just considering current implementations. http://serverfault.com/questions/134864/maximum-speed-of-data-transmission/134883#134883 – JavaRocky Apr 23 '10 at 00:36
  • So you won't be drilling a hole through the earth, eh? I had a perfectly good answer for you if you were but since you aren't, sorry... ;) – joeqwerty Apr 23 '10 at 00:42
  • 1
    What are the chances that a giant squid gets tangled in this cable? That's probably going to throw off your calculations. – joeqwerty Apr 23 '10 at 00:45
  • I worked on a project hooking up oil rigs in the Gulf Of Mexico to a SONET Network. The company that laid the fiber didn't bury it properly and a shrimper hooked the cable, got it tangled, and it looked like they took a chainsaw to it. Where did my link go???? Then the people they sent to fix it couldn't find the break (I think the person running the OTDR was, how do I say this nicely, a rookie). They flew me from near the Texas coast to Port Fouchon and they found the break the next day. We were transmitting over 100 miles on some legs, now those were lasers you didn't want to look at. – dbasnett Apr 23 '10 at 01:19
  • I was on 15 or so rigs over a three month period. When we first were given the project I expected them to be cesspools with dead sea creatures everywhere. Every one of the rigs I was on was a habitat for sea life, and it was "blue water". The only other place I have seen that variety of sea life is in an aquarium, and in those you don't see barracuda's, and hammerhead sharks with the tuna. – dbasnett Apr 23 '10 at 01:45
  • @JavaRocky: Will do. Just a little kidding on my part. Very good question. – joeqwerty Apr 23 '10 at 01:50
  • I looked briefly (this was 10+ years ago). I found some pictures, none of the amplifiers, my hair wasn't as gray then. It is going to bug me trying to remember the company that made the amplifiers... – dbasnett Apr 23 '10 at 10:58

4 Answers4

4

Actually, it does not even travel close to the speed of light.

Firstly, the refractive index for glass is approximately 1.5, varying by the exact material. This means that light traveling through glass in a straight line only goes about 2e8 m/s, not 3e8.

And then you have to consider the curvature of the path. Even with single-mode fiber there is a lot of sideways drift along the entire run. This can easily increase the actual distance traveled by 15% or more. So what sounds like an incredible (although it actually isn't given such large distances) 3e8 m/s has been cut nearly in half.

Transmission with lasers and mirrors would be faster, but then you have to consider that things such as atmospheric perturbation, and even birds would cause communications trouble.

Ignacio Vazquez-Abrams
  • 45,019
  • 5
  • 78
  • 84
  • Interesting. What is sideways drift? My noobie google search terms didn't help me. – JavaRocky Apr 23 '10 at 01:03
  • If you had a perfectly straight run of fiber, it would be possible for a light beam to enter at one end of the run, and exit at the other end. However, fiber is never actually straight, and because light can only go in straight lines, then you'll find that the beam goes in, runs along until it hits a side, which then cause it to bounce, and it will go off further along the fiber. – gorilla Apr 23 '10 at 01:08
  • Light *always* travels in a straight line, unless it meets a medium interface where there exists a difference between the refractive index of the two media. If the angle is obtuse enough, the difference is large enough, and the current medium's index higher than the other then what happens is the light reflects back into the first medium. This is how a fiber optic cable works. As the cable curves, the light ray bounces side to side along the cable as it travels down it, making the distance the light ray travels longer than the length of the actual cable. – Ignacio Vazquez-Abrams Apr 23 '10 at 01:09
  • @Ignacio. Light will also curve due to gravity, not just medium refraction... http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gravitational_lens Obviously, that has nothing to do with OP's question, but it does affect your "always" statement – Scott Lundberg Apr 23 '10 at 19:29
  • @Scott: Fair enough. The effects of gravity had slipped my mind. – Ignacio Vazquez-Abrams Apr 23 '10 at 20:02
0

I think fiber optic technology might be improved to where it closer approaches the speed of light.

Guessing whether there might ever be a technology that can transfer data FASTER then light is purely speculation. I've heard very theoretical talk of transferring data via quantum entanglement...where two photons can be "entangled" as one object and changing photon A's state will cause photon B's state to change, even when they are seperated over a great distance. Is this faster then light? Will it ever be practical? I don't know, just my non-physicist-layman's 2 cents (see comments).

Cory J
  • 1,528
  • 4
  • 19
  • 28
  • Ummm, wasn't that just some gumph made up for Mass Effect 2 to fill a neat plot hole to explain how communications were capable in real time at opposite ends of the galaxy? – Mark Henderson Apr 23 '10 at 02:10
  • Actually it's real - this is basically what quantum teleportation is. But in order to transmit information via quantum entanglement you also have to send some (smaller) amount of information by a classical method, so the overall information transfer is still limited by the vacuum speed of light. (Also: @Cory J, quantum mechanics doesn't allow you to change photon A's state in a predictable manner. All you can do is measure it and see what you get, but that will be correlated with photon B's state.) – David Z Apr 23 '10 at 03:37
0

Yes, definitely. The only thing you can to today is to reduce the latency added while sending or receiving the signal (faster computers, faster routers etc.).

Sven
  • 97,248
  • 13
  • 177
  • 225
0

Yes The answer is simple. Figure the speed allowing for the fact that the medium is not in a vaccuum and then calculate the distance to determine the time a trip will take. It cannot be changed.

Naturally, there are other factors for data transmission as TCP/IP is somewhat chatty

Dave M
  • 4,494
  • 21
  • 30
  • 30