Ocean Sponge May Be Best for Fiber Optics 321
TheViffer writes "ABC News is reporting that scientists say they've identified an ocean sponge, living in the darkness of the deep sea, that grows thin glass fibers capable of transmitting light better than industrial fiber optic cables used for telecommunication. 'You can actually tie a knot in these natural biological fibers and they will not break - it's really quite amazing,' said Joanna Aizenberg, who led the research at Bell Laboratories."
For all our technology (Score:5, Insightful)
But SCO owns it! (Score:4, Funny)
Anyone using a sea sponge better pay up and admit their blatent violation of others' IP.
Re:For all our technology (Score:2, Funny)
Re:For all our technology (Score:2, Funny)
Re:For all our technology (Score:3, Funny)
Re:For all our technology (Score:3, Funny)
Let's launch a nuclear attack an annihilate it before it annihilates us.
The obvious question .... (Score:3, Interesting)
What does a sponge need with such superior optical fibres ? Could they in fact use it for other purposes inside their bodies, such as optical communication ? ... now that would be amazing!
7 inches long! (Score:5, Funny)
Cool, fiber optics up to 7 inches long! That'll be effective! I can finally connect my computer to... uhh... to my uhh... what the hell, 7 inches! WTF!
Re:7 inches long! (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:7 inches long! (Score:2)
Re:7 inches long! (Score:5, Interesting)
We need a new acronym for "Read the WHOLE freakin' article." RTWFA, man, RTWFA
Re:7 inches long! (Score:2)
Re:7 inches long! (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:7 inches long! (Score:5, Funny)
FTFA?
Hmm...
RFTA = Read The Fucking Article...
FTFA = Fuck The Fucking Article?
LOL i know it was just a typo, but it's still funny, especially with a subject of "7 inches long!"
Re:7 inches long! (Score:2)
Re:7 inches long! (Score:2)
Just say it, we know you want to: Penis.
Re:7 inches long! (Score:2, Funny)
Re:7 inches long! (Score:5, Funny)
I got an email today addressing this issue. Naturally increae size [fayichina.com]
Re:7 inches long! (Score:3, Funny)
Bluetooth watch out!
Ahh yes.. this brings back child hood memories. (Score:5, Funny)
Copying nature? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Copying nature? (Score:5, Funny)
God, however, is another story.
Re:Copying nature? (Score:3, Funny)
God, however, is another story.
God indeed. He has so many publicists I can never tell who to send my check to.
Nature, by the way, is up to her neck in patent infringement suits from numerous Biotech firms. SCO has yet to make an official announcement reguarding any infringing soruce code but are carefully looking into the matter.
Re:Copying nature? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Copying nature? (Score:2)
Of course this presumes that the sponge has not since declared the GPL invalid, and relicensed itself with an EULA similar to the SCO NDA.
Not DMCA...SPCA (Score:2)
Re:Copying nature? (Score:2)
No, no, you misunderstand. Ruthlessly exploiting Nature, much like ruthlessly exploiting the public domain, is peachy-keen under the DMCA. Once some giant faceless corporation has learned the secret of the sponge, though, then that gets the full draconian protection.
If we did it your way, how ever would our cartels prosper?
Re:Copying nature? (Score:2)
The planet earth is doomed.
Great... (Score:4, Funny)
But seriously, won't this sponge smell funny especially when trunking it in dark and dry spaces like under floorings?
Just a thought.
Re:Great... (Score:2)
Yes, the whole dot-com thing was a fiasco. I don't think any currencies were actually compeltely wiped out. Get over it.
I have no idea what this has to do with sponges or fiber optics.
-Peter
Re:Great... (Score:2)
Like humanity has ever needed a reason to drive another species to extinction...
Re:Great... (Score:2)
I hate to say it, but it's almost like we need a reason not to.
Space or oceans? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Space or oceans? (Score:5, Insightful)
The oceans certainly contain many great mysteries. However, the effect we're having on it is pretty clear: destroy and degrade it with pollution. Algae blooms, dying coral, overfishing. We are slowly killing/pillaging the oceans, which doesn't seem to bother anyone enough to stop doing it. (Though occasionally we decide to do it less.) Hey, we don't live there anymore, not our problem!
Re:Space or oceans? (Score:2)
Re:Space or oceans? (Score:2)
Re:Space or oceans? (Score:5, Informative)
Oh, boy.....here we go.
Imagine the sun flared. Just a little one. What could happen to the earth?
The sun flares all the time. Our atmosphere and the ozone layer protect us.
Why, the entire atmosphere could be blown away, and the oceans could dry up. The deserts would turn to glass. All from a small solar flare.
*Sigh.......* No. This is not correct. See above comment for clarification.
What about a volcano? How many megatons of carbon dioxide and other noxious chemicals does that dump into the atmosphere, not to mention the pollution in the oceans?
CO2 release into the oceans is common and the CO2 flux is truly massive. However, what we need to worry about are some of the non-naturally occurring chemicals such as estrogens and chemicals found in fertilizers and run off from mining such as cyanides. We also have to worry about what is happening from all of the nuclear reactors that the former Soviet union has dumped into the sea among other things.
The algae blooms are there because the sun put them there. We had nothing to do with it.
Wrong. Human intervention most likely primarily from excess nitrogens are at the root of many of these. Other causes are world wide shipping, which carries algae to new homes in water contained in ballast tanks, global warming, and pollution draining into the oceans from coastal development and farmland, which provides again nitrogenous compounds essential for algae metabolism.
You are an idiot. spouting out half-truths and whining about it.
There is no call for that sort of treatment. Lighten up, eh?
Go crack a real science book, not the pseudo-crap they are passing off in high school today.
Your credentials are what?
Go take a look at how much water there is in the ocean, and try and figure out how much pollution we could actually dump in there if we really tried. You'll see that we would have barely any effect at all.
Many, many studies are being performed on just this and the results are sobering.
And how do you pillage the ocean? The natural resources in the ocean are going to die anyway. Rather than allowing the fish to float to the bottom of the ocean and rot and pollute the ocean, we are harvesting the excess every year so that we can feed a starving world. How is that pillaging?
With a comment like this, I am not even sure where to start. Is this a troll? You can't be serious.......
Re:Space or oceans? (Score:2)
Second is on the technical side. Which is easier? Designing something to withstand one atmosphere of pressure (holding an atmosphere in) and a bunch of heat
Re:Space or oceans? (Score:2)
Maybe it's because we're too busy exterminating the life in said oceans.
Sex, dummy (Score:2)
Deep sea diving doesn't get you laid like riding thousands of pounds of burning rocket fuel into LEO. I bet those astronauts live like Wilt Chamberlain when they're back on the ground.
How Did They Figure This Out... (Score:5, Funny)
EE 2: Let's look at organisms deep in the ocean!
EE 1: That's just crazy enough to work!
pressurized cables (Score:2, Insightful)
Great, now Verizon... (Score:5, Funny)
More fracture resistant than commercial fibers (Score:3, Interesting)
Re: (Score:2)
SPONGEZIRRA!!!!!! (Score:2)
--Ryv
So... (Score:3, Funny)
I wonder.... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:I wonder.... (Score:5, Funny)
and if they could reproduce what bees' do, a flying machine that weighs half a gram and sees what's going on.
and if they could synthesize what chickens do, you could eat things out of my ass
just that we know it exists, doesn't mean it can be synthesized (ot should be)
Oh yeah? (Score:2, Flamebait)
We got mother nature by the balls...er...titties!
Re:Oh yeah? (Score:2)
Actually, scientists believe there have been half-a-dozen or so mass extinctions. The latest one, the one where the dinosaurs bit it, was nothing compared to the Permian which supposedly
Re:Oh yeah? (Score:2)
Re:I wonder.... (Score:2)
This just cries out for a Tubgirl link.
Re:I wonder.... (Score:2)
I believe this very thing was tried here on slashdot with the writings of one Jon Katz. It might have worked, but it was too easy to tell where he was pulling that stuff from.
Why (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Why (Score:3, Interesting)
What is more interesting to me is; What are the chemical light trigger mechanisms? Could these be used in switching? Sort of a biochem based switching device. There is muc
Re:Why (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Why (Score:2)
Why do I talk to myself so much...Because sometimes it is the only way to carry on an intelligent conversation
Re:Why (Score:2)
Spongebob Glasspants? (Score:5, Funny)
SPONGEBOB GLASSPANTS!
Flexible, clear, with sodium has he.
SPONGEBOB GLASSPANTS!
If flexible fibers be something you wish,
Dive under the ocean and look for some fish!
Re:Spongebob Glasspants? (Score:4, Funny)
classic episode...!!
Donovan: Atlanta was a city, landlocked, Hundreds of miles from the area we now call the atlantic ocean.
Yet so desperate the city's desire for tourism That they moved offshore, becoming an island and an even bigger delta hub, Until the city overdeveloped and it started to sink.
Knowing their fate, the quality people ran away: Ted Turner, Hank Aaron, Jeff Foxworthy, the guy who invented Coca Cola, the magician And the other so-called gods of our legends, though gods they were, And also Jane Fonda was there. The others chose to remain behind on their porches with their rifles And one day evolving to mermaids and sing and dance and ring in the new.
Everyone: Hail Atlanta!
Looting nature (Score:4, Insightful)
I'm torn on this one... (Score:2, Interesting)
[sarcasm] Silly me. I'd forgotten that it's unfashionable to appreciate a tree (flower, sponge, animal) for its own sake and nothing else. [/sarcasm]
Snarky comments
Fiber optic cables? (Score:2)
I think Steven Wright said it best: (Score:5, Funny)
Sponges? (Score:2, Insightful)
She says Spongies RULE....
Maybe she's been onto something all along...
Science Fact? (Score:2, Interesting)
That must suck (Score:3, Funny)
LS
Re:That must suck (Score:2)
We will NOT hunt this sponge to extinction. (Score:2, Insightful)
If you're wondering Chinese Hamster Ovaries are pretty much the standard in the manufacture of human proteins. I grow them in Bioreactors (fancy jars) everyday.
Ought Oh (Score:2, Funny)
We probably have a while to go (Score:5, Insightful)
Considering that these sponges aren't exactly easy to find (like orb spiders), the research should take much longer. But my oh my, imagine the applications: fiber that is as durable as ethernet. Wow.
Did our distant ancestors make this stuff? (Score:2)
Obviously, you couldn't patent the invention of banging two rocks together, since our ancestors did it.
Sponges are the most primitive Metazoans (multicelled organisms.) All animal life is descended from one sort or another of Sponge.
Our closest single-celled relatives are little buggers called Choanoflagellates, [berkeley.edu] by the way.
Did the particular sponges from which we are descended make this stuff, I wonder? Probably not, since they presumably lived in relatively shallow salt water before evolvin
Bell labs? (Score:3, Funny)
Warning (Score:2)
That's why I have my rubber ducky with 802.11b support...
I now have... (Score:2)
Let's go deep-sea trawl some (Score:2)
But I really fear that a sea creature such as this could be exploited. Imagine there's another tech boom, and everyone's out to capture these thingies. Is it really worth wiping out species just so we can get faster porn?
Re:Let's go deep-sea trawl some (Score:2)
what I really want to know is... (Score:3, Funny)
"Hey Bob, we got another load of crap from the bottom on that trawl. want me to throw it overboard?"
"Nah, let's try hooking part of it up to our router and see what happens!"
Those clever scientists never cease to amaze me.
hmm well (Score:2)
Sponge Bob? (Score:2)
-psy
Index of Refraction? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Index of Refraction? (Score:3, Informative)
It directly determines the critical angle for total internal reflection, which affects the ratio of bending radius to fiber diameter that you can support without unacceptable light loss.
It also has everything to do with the materials you make the fiber with. A minimum required refractive index limits materials choices, which limits mechanical properties. A carefully-doped glass fiber will have a high
Where Japan SHOULD direct funding... (Score:3, Interesting)
This is one reason why we should be keeping more of the research money on terra firma. As far as helping humankind, the oceans have much more to offer than Mars or a passing meteor or a distant galaxy (at least at this point). I'm not saying that stuff isn't academically enriching, but it doesn't (directly) solve our earth-bound problems.
Bending Fibre Optics (Score:4, Informative)
Fibre optics work on the principle of total internal reflection. The angle at which the light strikes the interface between glass and air is too shallow for it to get refracted out into the air, so instead it bounces off. As far as a beam of light is concerned, a length of fibre optic is just like a tube whose inside walls have a perfect mirror finish.
If you put a tight enough bend into the fibre, then the light will no longer be striking at an unrefractable angle, and therefore will escape. {You can try this with cheap 1mm. acrylic fibre if you remove the outer jacket and warm it in a pan of boiling water}.
Now, glass fibres exhibit very nice thermoplastic behaviour, and can actually be bent without breaking to tighter radii than acrylic. Unfortunately, they begin leaking light long before they break
Re:Hint for Bell Labs researchers. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Journalist != physicist (Score:3)
Re:Journalist != physicist (Score:3, Informative)
the speed of light in a medium does not equal the the speed of light in a vacuum. here is a handy chart for you. [what-is-th...-light.com]
Re:Journalist != physicist (Score:2)
Nope. Think about it for a second. If this were the case how many colors would you see in light passing through a window? one? two? ten? certainly you would never see white sunlight.. and well if it were absorbed and reabsorbed a great deal and re-emitt
Re:Over fishing Risk? (Score:5, Insightful)
You try and replicate the process the sponges use. It at least shows it is possible to make the stuff at cold temperatures, which as the article states (which you obviously didn't bother comprehending, and probably reading) makes doping the glass easier.
Re:Over fishing Risk? (Score:2)
GM does have uses. Too bad illegitimate scientists try to put a stigma on it.
Re:Over fishing Risk? (Score:2)
Re:Over fishing Risk? (Score:2)
Re:Yeah but (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Yeah but (Score:3, Insightful)
Actually, the reason you don't have fiber up to your doorstep has more to do with the high cost of digging up your street in order to get it there. This isn't really feasible except maybe in new neighborhoods. Fiber's actually pretty cheap these days, especially compared to other equipment costs like switches and ADMs.
The other problem right now is the high cost of components such as tunable lasers. Even if every home had fiber, it'd cost a lot more to equip your computer with an optical network card.
Re:Yeah but (Score:2)
Now we know that these sponges are fibre, we also know a big tidal wave would bring fibre to your doorstep.
Re:Yeah but (Score:2)
Re:Tech meet Nature (Score:2)
Moon Beavers (Score:2)
Sory, I couldn't resist the snide comment. You are mostly right, but in certain cases we have done far better than the rest of nature. Yes, that's right, we're part of nature, too.
Re:bittersweet discovery (Score:2)