Since the first fiber optic cables rolled out in the 1970s, they've become a major part of everything from medical devices to high-speed internet and cable TV. But as it turns out, one group of marine ...
A new study by researchers from Duke University and Stanford University reveals that heart cockles, named for their ...
Photo by Dakota McCoy Clams called Heart cockles, found in the warm, equatorial waters of the Indo-Pacific, have a mutually ...
Meta is expected to annoounce its plan to lay over 25,000 miles of fiber optic cables under the sea, which could cost more ...
Report on how AI is driving market transformation - The global silicon photonics market size is estimated to grow by USD 5.24 ...
McCoy wanted to know why that might be. In a paper published in Nature Communications, she and her colleagues conclude that ...
Heart cockles have windows in their shells made from natural optical fibers, allowing light through to the algae inside them.
A team of marine biologists, ecologists and evolutionary specialists from the University of Chicago, Stanford University and ...
Devices, now shrunk to the size of our palms, provide instant access to a global network, allowing us to find and disseminate information without confronting the vast expanse of servers and ...
He said that in future, new infrastructure, including marine fiber-optic cables that provide connectivity around the world, could come under attack." The move would have the goal of sowing "chaos ...
Khyzak REBOFF is a new Ukrainian FPV kamikaze drone with fiber optic cable for communication instead of radio. This makes it immune to jamming, the most effective protection against small drones.