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  • Hi everyone, this is Dave from London English Online, welcome back. Today's listening is

  • about a guy who works in the communication industry, so you can expect some technical

  • language. Remember, you can turn captions on to get subtitles so you can listen and

  • read at the same time. As you are listening think about these three questions and we'll

  • look at the answers together at the end of the video.

  • Hi, My name's Sam and I work in the fibre optic cable industry. So, my job is, as a

  • physicist, to think about the design of lasers and equipment called modulators which are

  • used to turn data, that is everything which you use on the internet: video, voice, everything

  • that powers our modern electrical world gets turned into pulses of light which we send

  • down optical fibres and that light can be transmitted everywhere around the world. So

  • if you imagine that I'd like to talk to my friend on the other side of the world, my

  • voice gets turned into a series of pulses of light which get transmitted down an optical

  • fibre which runs underneath the sea and reappears on the other side of the Atlantic and gets

  • converted then back into voice and that is a means of communicating with people not just

  • by voice but also by text and internet and everything else. My job specifically involves

  • designing lasers which are the sources of the light and we work with special materials

  • called semi-conductors. Semi conductors have very special properties between what we call

  • conductors and insulators and they allow us in a very large variety of ways to convert

  • electrical energy into light energy. Now the laser is the most efficient means by which

  • we can do that and the laser must be designed very carefully with a colour, a colour of

  • light what we call a wavelength, very specifically designed for the type of optical fibre we

  • transmit the light down. It 's important that a wavelength of light is chosen that it is

  • not absorbed within the fibre since the length of the fibre, which would typically be going

  • underneath the Atlantic ocean from the United Kingdom to the USA, would be typically many

  • thousands of kilometres long. And it is important that when we shine our laser in one end of

  • the fibre that we get something at the other end that we are able to detect. So, that wavelength

  • must be very specifically chosen so that the absorption within that fibre is kept to a

  • minimum and that we can actually measure something at the other end. But the optical fibre industry,

  • the communication industry, is evolving very quickly the modern demands of the internet,

  • the rise of YouTube and Facebook and all these social media which we rely on so much more

  • every day, continuously are driving up the need for capacity within optical fibres. There

  • is a certain limit on how much you can transmit through a fibre, the rate of 1s and 0s which

  • we call the bit rate which you can transmit through a fibre is currently limited at the

  • moment to about 10 billion bits per second. Now, that may seem like a lot but a bit of

  • information carries very little. If you think about typical examples, for instance an Mp3,

  • an audio file of length say 3 minutes that is 3 megabytes, that is 3 million bytes and

  • there are 8 bits in a byte which means 3 x 8 that 24 million bits of information just

  • in 3 minutes of audio and the same would be for a phone call, a phone call would require

  • several minutes minimum, maybe up to an hour, and that's a lot of information to transmit.

  • If you think about video for instance, video files these days are several gigabytes in

  • size and that's billions of bytes. So, if everyone on the internet was watching a video,

  • say on YouTube, or, you know, in Britain we have BBC iplayer which allows us to watch

  • information streamed on the BBC. All that data from every single user needs to be transmitted

  • through the fibre. Now that puts huge demands and strain on the capacity of the fibres.

  • So my job, as working in the fibre optic communications industry, is to do research into how we can

  • improve the capacity of those fibres on a daily basis. Now we are working on technology

  • at the moment that will hopefully allow us to multiply that by ten. So, to go from 10

  • gigabits per second, 10 billion bits per second, up to 100 billion bits per second. But this

  • is real technology now and we are really pushing the limits of what we can do with optical

  • fibres at the present time. And these demands are continuously being driven by the industry

  • who demand faster and faster speeds every day. So we accept these challenges and we

  • move forward and this is the very largest part of my work at the moment: understanding

  • these challenges and overcoming them. Ok, I hope you understood all that, but if

  • not, go back, listen again and this time turn on the captions so you can listen and read

  • at the same time. But for now, let's look at these questions. Number 1, what does his

  • job involve? Well, he mentioned that his job involves designing the lasers that they use

  • with fibre optic cables. Number 2, How do fibre-optic cables work? Well, as Sam explained,

  • information is transformed into pulses of light which are created by a laser. This laser

  • sends the pulses of light down a cable and the modulator collects these pulses at the

  • other end and turns them back into data. And finally, question 3, why is his job so important?

  • Well, we are a very good example. You are watching a YouTube video and, like the rest

  • of society, many people are using the internet to share videos, to share ideas, to watch

  • TV, to listen to the radio and so the amount of information that needs to be transmitted

  • is going up all the time. So his job is so important because he keeps the infrastructure

  • able to cope with the amount of information that is being sent along it. OK guys, so we

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  • Thank you for watching, see you next time. This is Dave saying goodbye for now.

Hi everyone, this is Dave from London English Online, welcome back. Today's listening is

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