PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Novel optical fibers transmit high-quality images

Image transport through new fiber architecture rivals that of current endoscopy imaging fibers

Novel optical fibers transmit high-quality images
2014-02-25
(Press-News.org) MILWAUKEE – After having recently discovered a new way to propagate multiple beams of light through a single strand of optical fiber, engineers at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee (UWM) now have found that their novel fiber architecture can transmit images with a quality that is comparable or better than the current commercial endoscopy imaging fibers.

Because of this, the work has potential not only in next-generation high-speed communication, but also biomedical imaging.

The work is published today in the journal Nature Communications.

In conventional optical fibers, which are the backbone of the Internet, only one spatial channel of light traverses the fiber. In order to transmit more data, Arash Mafi and Salman Karbasi last year created an optical fiber using a method that is unique among existing multicore optical fibers.

Mafi, an associate professor of electrical engineering, and graduate research associate Karbasi harnessed a phenomenon called "Anderson localization" to design an optical fiber with a strong scattering mechanism that traps a beam of light as it traverses the fiber. The work was done in collaboration with Karl Koch, a scientist with Corning Inc.

The fiber consists of two randomly distributed polymers, which scatter the light. The fiber's disordered interior causes a beam of light passing through it to freeze laterally, accommodating multiple beams.

"I knew it would transport images," says Mafi. "What I didn't expect was that the resolution and contrast would be so good."

The team loads an image 30 microns wide – about one-third the width of a human hair – into the fiber. At the other end, a lens projects an enlarged image onto a screen. The optical fiber provides a direct one-to-one image transfer, Mafi says, with less pixelation and higher contrast.

"The beauty and distinction of this is that our design guides the light everywhere, not through individual cores," he says. "What really surprised us is that the transported image's high quality is achieved because of – not in spite of – the high level of disorder in the fiber."

Additional co-authors on the paper are Ryan Frazier, a UWM undergraduate student, and Thomas Hawkins and John Ballato of Clemson University.

The next step is to improve the building process in order to lower the loss of information.

Mafi and Karbasi theorize that one way to improve the quality of transported images is to use glass with randomly distributed air holes in the fiber architecture, rather than using polymers. There has been some preliminary progress in constructing glass fibers by the team, and further improvements are expected from the collaboration with Ballato's team at Clemson, experts in glass fiber fabrication.

Their fiber design is the first practical application of "Anderson localization," which is named after physicist Philip W. Anderson, who first identified the curious containment of electrons in a highly disordered medium, an observation for which he shared the 1977 Nobel Prize in Physics.

INFORMATION: END

[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Novel optical fibers transmit high-quality images

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Mood and food: The better your mood, the better you eat

Mood and food: The better your mood, the better you eat
2014-02-25
Previous research has found that emotions affect eating, and that negative moods and positive moods may actually lead to preferences for different kinds of foods. For example, if given the choice between grapes or chocolate candies, someone in a good mood may choose the former while someone in a bad mood may choose the latter. The research reported in this article looks at the "why:" Why, when someone is in a bad mood, will they choose to eat junk food and why, when someone is in a good mood, will they make healthier food choices? To get at the "why," we married the ...

Use of acetaminophen during pregnancy linked to ADHD in children, UCLA researchers say

2014-02-25
Acetaminophen, found in over-the-counter products such as Excedrin and Tylenol, provides many people with relief from headaches and sore muscles. When used appropriately, it is considered mostly harmless. Over recent decades, the drug, which has been marketed since the 1950s, has become the medication most commonly used by pregnant women for fevers and pain. Now, a long-term study by UCLA, in collaboration with the University of Aarhus in Denmark, has raised concerns about the use of acetaminophen during pregnancy. In a report in the current online edition of ...

Building a better mouse model to understand pancreatic cancer

2014-02-25
(SALT LAKE CITY)—Cancer of the pancreas is usually not detected until it's too late to cure. But precursor lesions that form in the pancreas and its ducts can signal the disease before it strikes, and when caught early enough, they can be prevented from progressing to become cancer. In a new study, researchers led by a molecular biologist at the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF), report two breakthroughs in understanding those lesions and their role in pancreatic cancer: the development of the first mouse model that simulates a precursor lesion called intraductal ...

Water is detected in a planet outside our solar system

Water is detected in a planet outside our solar system
2014-02-25
Water has been detected in the atmosphere of a planet outside our solar system with a new technique that could help researchers to learn how many planets with water, like Earth, exist throughout the universe. The team of scientists that made the discovery includes astronomers at Penn State University and other institutions. The astronomers detected the water in the atmosphere of a planet as massive as Jupiter that is orbiting the nearby star tau Boötis. The discovery is described in a scientific paper published in the 24 February 2014 online version of The Astrophysical ...

New blood test could detect heart attacks more quickly

2014-02-25
MAYWOOD, Ill. – A new blood test can detect heart attacks hours faster than the current gold-standard blood test, according to a study led by Loyola University Chicago Stritch School of Medicine researchers. The new test measures a protein that is released to the bloodstream by dying heart muscle. The protein is called cardiac myosin binding protein-C (cMyBP-C). The study found that cMyBP-C is released to the blood within just 15 minutes of cardiac damage, and rises to significant levels in three hours. "This is a potential ultra-early biomarker that could confirm whether ...

Vascular disease affecting women 'poorly understood' by many health care providers

2014-02-25
MAYWOOD, IL – A vascular disease called fibromuscular dysplasia, which can cause high blood pressure, kidney failure, stroke and other symptoms -- mostly in women -- is "poorly understood by many healthcare providers," according to a Scientific Statement from the American Heart Association. Neurologist Jose Biller, MD, of Loyola University Medical Center, is a co-author of the statement, published online ahead of print in the American Heart Association journal Circulation. First author is Jeffrey W. Olin, DO of Mount Sinai School of Medicine. Biller said FMD "is a ...

Using stolen computer processing cycles to mine Bitcoin

Using stolen computer processing cycles to mine Bitcoin
2014-02-25
A team of computer scientists at the University of California, San Diego, has taken an unprecedented, in-depth look at how malware operators use the computers they infect to mine Bitcoin, a virtual currency whose value is highly volatile. Researchers examined more than 2,000 pieces of malware used by Bitcoin mining operations in 2012 and 2013. They were able to estimate how much money operators made off their operations and which countries were most affected. The computer scientists report that the revenue of 10 of the mining operations they studied reached at least 4,500 ...

Strawberries lower cholesterol

Strawberries lower cholesterol
2014-02-25
A team of volunteers ate half a kilo of strawberries a day for a month to see whether it altered their blood parameters in any way. At the end of this unusual treatment, their levels of bad cholesterol and triglycerides reduced significantly, according to the analyses conducted by Italian and Spanish scientists. Several studies had already demonstrated the antioxidant capacity of strawberries, but now researchers from the Università Politecnica delle Marche (UNIVPM, Italy), together with colleagues from the Universities of Salamanca, Granada and Seville (Spain), conducted ...

The importance of (experimental) design

The importance of (experimental) design
2014-02-25
There are clear advantages to living in cities: safety, ready availability of infrastructure, plenty of company etc. Nevertheless, a large number of people eschew them for the benefits of country life, such as clean air and lots of space. Many species of animals, and particularly birds, face the same choice between living in large groups or remaining in smaller ones, thereby avoiding disadvantages of larger colonies such as the increased risk of disease and increased aggression from neighbours. What causes different individuals of a particular species to take the decisions ...

New study finds concussion-related health problems in retired football players

New study finds concussion-related health problems in retired football players
2014-02-25
New Rochelle, NY, February 25, 2014—Repeated concussions and mild brain trauma can result in reduced levels of growth hormone, gonadotropin, and thyroid hormones, causing disorders such as metabolic syndrome and erectile dysfunction and overall poor quality of life. The results of a new study of retired professional football players that compares number of concussions sustained during their careers and health problems associated with hormonal deficiency is published in Journal of Neurotrauma, a peer-reviewed journal from Mary Ann Liebert, Inc., publishers. The article is ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Recycling a pollutant to make ammonia production greener

Common institutional ownership linked to less aggressive business strategies in Chinese firms

Energy and regional factors drive carbon price volatility in China’s emissions trading markets

Researchers from NUS Medicine and the Institute of Mental Health detect early brain changes linked to future psychosis development

Cryopreserved vs liquid-stored platelets for the treatment of surgical bleeding

Cost-effectiveness of cryopreserved vs liquid-stored platelets for managing surgical bleeding

Adaptive Kalman filter boosts BDS-3 navigation accuracy in challenging environments

Home-based monitoring could transform care for patients receiving T-cell redirecting therapies

Listening to the 'whispers' of electrons and crystals: A quantum discovery

Report on academic exchange (colloquium) with Mapua University

Sport in middle childhood can breed respect for authority in adolescence

From novel therapies to first-in-human trials, City of Hope advances blood cancer care at the American Society of Hematology (ASH) annual conference

Research aims to strengthen the security of in-person voting machines

New study exposes hidden Alzheimer’s 'hot spots' in rural Maryland and what they reveal about America’s growing healthcare divide

ASH 2025: Study connects Agent Orange exposure to earlier and more severe cases of myelodysplastic syndrome

ASH 2025: New data highlights promise of pivekimab sunirine in two aggressive blood cancers ​

IADR elects George Belibasakis as vice-president

Expanding the search for quantum-ready 2D materials

White paper on leadership opportunities for AI to increase employee value released by University of Phoenix College of Doctoral Studies

ASH 2025: New combination approach aims to make CAR T more durable in lymphoma

‘Ready-made’ T-cell gene therapy tackles ‘incurable’ T-cell leukemia

How brain activity changes throughout the day

Australian scientists reveal new genetic risk for severe macular degeneration

GLP-1 receptor agonists likely have little or no effect on obesity-related cancer risk

Precision immunotherapy to improve sepsis outcomes

Insilico Medicine unveils winter edition of Pharma.AI, accelerating the path to pharmaceutical superintelligence

Study finds most people trust doctors more than AI but see its potential for cancer diagnosis

School reopening during COVID-19 pandemic associated with improvement in children’s mental health

Research alert: Old molecules show promise for fighting resistant strains of COVID-19 virus

Journal of Nuclear Medicine Technology supplement highlights advances in theranostics and opportunities for growth

[Press-News.org] Novel optical fibers transmit high-quality images
Image transport through new fiber architecture rivals that of current endoscopy imaging fibers