Work

Fiber Optic Communication

paper · 1966

Telecommunications Optics Electrical Engineering

“Dielectric-fibre Surface Waveguides for Optical Frequencies,” published by Charles K. Kao and George Hockham in 1966, established the theoretical foundation for fiber optic communication. This paper demonstrated that glass fibers could transmit light over long distances, launching a technological revolution that now carries over 99% of the world’s international data traffic.

Background

By the 1960s, telecommunications networks were straining under increasing demand. Copper cables had limited bandwidth, and radio spectrum was becoming congested. Light, with its vastly higher frequencies, offered theoretically enormous bandwidth—but no practical medium existed for guiding it over long distances.

Early optical fibers existed, but they could only transmit light for about 20 meters before the signal degraded beyond usefulness. Most scientists believed this was an inherent limitation of glass[1].

The Breakthrough

Working at Standard Telecommunication Laboratories (STL) in Harlow, England, Kao and Hockham conducted careful research into why optical fibers lost light so rapidly. Their crucial discovery: the loss was not intrinsic to glass itself but was caused by impurities—primarily metal ions and water.

Their 1966 paper made a revolutionary prediction: if glass could be purified to remove these impurities, optical fibers could achieve losses below 20 decibels per kilometer (dB/km)—making them practical for telecommunications[2].

This was far below the 1,000 dB/km typical of fibers at the time—a 50-fold improvement that seemed almost impossible.

Key Technical Insights

The paper established several fundamental principles:

Single-Mode Fibers

Kao showed that fibers with very small cores (a few micrometers) would support only a single propagation mode, eliminating dispersion problems that degraded signals in larger fibers.

Material Purity

The paper identified specific impurities causing absorption and specified the purity levels required—glass with fewer than one part per million of critical impurities.

Wavelength Selection

Kao determined optimal wavelengths for transmission, avoiding absorption bands where glass naturally attenuates light.

Making It Real

Kao didn’t stop at theory. He traveled worldwide, visiting glass manufacturers and encouraging development of ultra-pure glass. His advocacy sparked an international race:

Modern Fiber Optic Technology

Today’s fiber optic systems far exceed Kao’s initial predictions[3]:

Impact

Fiber optic communication transformed global telecommunications:

Nobel Prize

In 2009, Charles Kao received the Nobel Prize in Physics “for groundbreaking achievements concerning the transmission of light in fibers for optical communication.” He shared the prize with Willard Boyle and George Smith, who invented the CCD image sensor.

The Nobel committee noted that Kao’s work “laid the foundation for the fiber-optic networks that today carry most of the world’s communication traffic.”


Sources

  1. Nobel Prize. “The Nobel Prize in Physics 2009.” Background on fiber optics before Kao.
  2. Nature. “Kuen Charles Kao (1933–2018).” The breakthrough discovery.
  3. Wikipedia. “Fiber-optic communication.” Modern technology and applications.