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Pushing light to new limits

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Australian researchers are rewriting the rules on how light behaves when confined in ever-smaller optical fibers. Everything has its limits, and light-carrying optical fibers are no exception. Until now, it was thought that, as the size of the optical fiber shrinks, light becomes more and more confined until it reaches a point beyond which it cannot be squeezed any smaller, and it rapidly begins to diverge. This ultimate point was thought to occur when the strand of fiber is just a few hundred nanometers in diameter. At the University of Adelaide, next-generation nanoscale optical fibers...Read full article

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    Published: January 2010
    AfsharBasic ScienceCommunicationsDr. Shahraam Afsharfiber opticsFreebodyHeike Ebendorff-HeidepriemMarie Freebodymicrostructured fibersnonlinear polarizationoptical computingoptical data processingoptical fibersOpticsplanar waveguidesResearch & TechnologySchroedinger equationsupercontinuum generationTanya MonroTech PulsetelecommunicationsUniversity of AdelaideWenqi Zhang

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