ScienceIQ.com

Hey Nose-Brain!

Sex, food, and smell are linked in our brain by ancient pathways governing appetite, odor detection, and hormones. In fact, another name for the brain's limbic system (a primitive brain-within-the-brain responsible for emotional urges, hormone levels, and unconscious bodily functions such as blood pressure and appetite) is rhinencephalon, or ...

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NoseBrain
Astronomy

The Kuiper Belt

The Kuiper (pronounced Ki-Per) Belt is often called our solar system's 'final frontier.' This disk-shaped region of icy debris is about 12 to 15 billion kilometers (2.8 billion to 9.3 billion miles) ... Continue reading

TheKuiperBelt
Chemistry

Chemical Burning

Chemical burns are the result of very normal reactions that can occur between the offending material and living tissue components. People generally tend to regard their bodies as things outside of the ... Continue reading

ChemicalBurning
Engineering

Hollywood To The Rescue

Sixty years ago, World War II was driving many advances in the sciences; a surprising number of these developments have evolved to impact our lives today. At the beginning of the war, scientists and ... Continue reading

HollywoodRescue
Biology

Cloning and Ethics

Cloning technology today is far from perfect: it requires many attempts and only 1%, if any, of the cloned eggs become embryos and then survive. For example, the first cloned sheep, Dolly, was ... Continue reading

CloningandEthics

Delivered by TIR

TIRThe content of this article has been delivered to you via internet fiber-optic links. Today most phone conversations, fax transmissions and almost all internet and email traffic travel at the speed of light between cities and continents via fiber-optics. An optical fiber (or fiber-optics cable) is to light what a copper wire is to electricity, a guiding medium. In an electrical wire, electrons rush from one end of the wire to the other; driven by the electric field. In optical fiber, photons of light travel from one end to the other purely because they have no choice; they are confined to the cable and can not escape! The phenomenon that is responsible for the confinement of the light signal within the core of the fiber-optic cable is called the Total Internal Reflection or TIR.

If you have ever been under water in a swimming pool with your head close to the surface, you have probably noticed that the water-air interface becomes a mirror and you cannot see outside. That is an example of TIR. Basically, whenever you have an interface of two materials (mediums) of different indexes of refraction or optical density, a light beam will fully reflect at this interface if it is trying to escape the denser material at an angle that is larger than a certain critical value.

All optical fibers are basically cylindrical wires made of glass. They have a core (the optically denser medium) and a so-called cladding, which is optically less dense. The cladding fully surrounds the core, like a cylindrical jacket. The light signal is inserted into the core and it travels down the core with occasional TIR reflections from the core-cladding interface. It is almost as if you have a tiny cylindrical mirror from which the light reflects. These total internal reflections are so efficient that the light signal does not lose much of its strength at each reflection as it would when reflecting from an ordinary silver mirror. Thanks to TIR, signals can travel as far as 250 miles (400 km) without needing amplification.