Skip to main content

Bell Labs boosts Internet connections to 400 Gbps using noise-canceling tech

why are one third of americans turning their backs on high speed internet featured image
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Who would have thought the same technology that pushes out noise from your headphones could help data not only travel longer distances but also faster and more reliably? Researchers from Bell Laboratories seem to have found a way to do just that based on their findings published in Nature Photonics.

As lead author Dr. Xiang Liu told BBC News, “This concept, looking back, is quite easy to understand, but surprisingly, nobody did this before.”

Like noise-canceling headphones that use external sounds to drown out the noise that you hear in your ears, Liu and his team discovered that the interference light runs into when traveling quickly through a fiber optic cable can also be negated. By sending two beams of light rather than just one beam down a cable, the noise from the signals end up canceling each other out when the two beams meet at the other end. As a result, the team was able to push data through 7,954 miles of cable at 400 Gbps, which is 400 times faster than Google Fiber’s gigabit Internet that most of us don’t have access to.

The ability to significantly increase Internet speeds and help data travel longer distances is especially important. After all, the entire world is becoming more reliant on the Internet, and trans-continental cabling might become necessary to keep data moving under any circumstance. Plus, significantly faster speeds will make future technologies and services possible.

“Nowadays everybody is consuming more and more bandwidth – demanding more and more communication,” Dr. Liu told the BBC. “We need to solve some of the fundamental problems to sustain the capacity growth.”

Unfortunately,  though we all want smoother Netflix streaming and faster download speeds right now, there’s no word yet on when this technology will be available to consumers.

Gloria Sin
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Gloria’s tech journey really began when she was studying user centered design in university, and developed a love for…
The Meta Quest 3 will get an exciting new type of app
A Windows app extends into 3D space via a Meta Quest 3 VR headset.

A Windows app extends into 3D space via a Meta Quest 3 VR headset. Microsoft

At Build 2024, Microsoft announced it partnered with Meta to extend Windows apps into 3D space with the help of a Quest VR headset. When working on physical objects, it’s important to have spatial awareness of components.

Read more
How to build a PC from scratch: A beginner’s guide
Installing RAM in a desktop PC.

Building a PC for the first time, or even the second or third time, can feel a little intimidating. But one of the best parts about building a computer is that, for the most part, the parts fit where they should, and don't fit where they shouldn't. A graphics card will fit in the graphics card slot, and good luck putting the CPU in the wrong socket.

With a little care, time, and this handy guide, you can build a PC without hassle. We're here to walk you through it.

Read more
Microsoft just made Paint relevant again
Person using Windows 11 laptop on their lap by the window.

The controversial Recall feature has grabbed all the headlines from Microsoft’s Copilot+ announcements yesterday, but this new AI feature is also making Paint relevant again.

It’s called Cocreator, and it’s a new AI feature that can turn your quick sketch, augmented by text, into a much more realistic and impressive image. The exciting thing is that it does all this in real time. It might not get it right the first time, so you'll need patience, and the more details you give about what you want in the image, the better.

Read more