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

CCNY researchers use novel polarization to increase data speeds

2015-04-23
(Press-News.org) As the world's exponentially growing demand for digital data slows the Internet and cell phone communication, City College of New York researchers may have just figured out a new way to increase its speed.

Giovanni Milione, a PhD student under City College Distinguished Professor of Science and Engineering Robert Alfano, led the pioneering experiment conducted at the University of Southern California with collaborators from Corning Incorporated, Scotland, Italy and Canada.

"Conventional methods of data transmission use light which has the fastest speed in the universe. However, these methods are being exhausted by data hungry technologies, such as, smart phones and cloud computing," said Milione. "So, we came up with an unconventional method."

Using special devices called "q-plates," the researchers manipulated a laser beam's polarization into novel shapes some of which Milione referred to as "radial" and "azimuthal." "While light's polarization (linear and circular) is used for many modern technologies, such as, 3D television, its shape is often left untouched," he said.

The researchers showed that each shape could carry an additional data stream. While the researchers used only four shapes, in principal, the number that can be used is unlimited. "The amount of data that can be transmitted on a single laser beam can be scaled to terabits or even petabits," said Alfano. "This technology is potentially compatible with building to building communication in NYC or even between Google data centers."



INFORMATION:

Their research, supported in part by DARPA, the Army Research Office, and Corning Incorporated, appears in an upcoming issue of the journal, "Optics Letters." About The City College of New York

Since 1847, The City College of New York has provided low-cost, high-quality education for New Yorkers in a wide variety of disciplines. More than 16,000 students pursue undergraduate and graduate degrees in: the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences; the Bernard and Anne Spitzer School of Architecture; the School of Education; the Grove School of Engineering; the Sophie Davis School of Biomedical Education, and the Colin Powell School for Civic and Global Leadership. U.S. News, Princeton Review and Forbes all rank City College among the best colleges and universities in the United States.



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Revolutionary discovery leads to invention of new 'building blocks'

2015-04-23
Polymer science will have to add a new giant molecule to its lexicon thanks to a cutting-edge discovery at The University of Akron. Taking a revolutionary "building blocks" approach, researchers have pioneered a way to create a new class of very large polymer molecules, called macromolecules, which assemble themselves into strong, stable structures. The work has been done in collaboration with researchers at Peking University in China and The University of Tokyo in Japan. Their findings have been published in the April 24, 2015 issue of Science magazine. A team led by ...

Astronomers find runaway galaxies

Astronomers find runaway galaxies
2015-04-23
We know of about two dozen runaway stars, and have even found one runaway star cluster escaping its galaxy forever. Now, astronomers have spotted 11 runaway galaxies that have been flung out of their homes to wander the void of intergalactic space. "These galaxies are facing a lonely future, exiled from the galaxy clusters they used to live in," said astronomer Igor Chilingarian (Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics/Moscow State University). Chilingarian is the lead author of the study, which is appearing in the journal Science. An object is a runaway if it's ...

Chance and circumstance tip immune control of cancer

2015-04-23
You think that your immune system is there to protect you. But what happens when it starts working against you? In the earliest stages of cancer formation, the immune system is forced to make a momentous decision. It either activates and suppresses tumor growth to help the body fight disease, or it becomes dysfunctional, helping the tumor grow and making treatment more difficult. Because this tipping point occurs before a person even realizes something is wrong, doctors are unable to directly observe this critical stage. "We believe that when immune cells enter a tumor ...

New strategy for mapping regulatory networks associated with multi-gene diseases

2015-04-23
WORCESTER, MA - Scientists at the University of Massachusetts Medical School have applied a powerful tool in a new way to characterize genetic variants associated with human disease. The work, published today in Cell, will allow scientists to more easily and efficiently describe genomic variations underlying complex, multi-gene diseases. "Up to this point, we've only been able to investigate one disease-causing mutation at a time," said principal investigator Marian Walhout, PhD, co-director of the Program in Systems Biology and professor of molecular medicine at UMMS. ...

The past, present and future of pancreatic cancer research and treatment

2015-04-23
The oncologists Manuel Hidalgo, Director of the Clinical Research Programme of the Spanish National Cancer Research Centre (CNIO), and Ignacio Garrido-Laguna, member of the Experimental Therapeutics Program at Huntsman Cancer Institute of the University of Utah (USA), have recently published a review of state-of-the-art clinical treatments for pancreatic cancer -- including the most current therapies and innovative research -- in the prestigious scientific journal Nature Reviews Clinical Oncology. In their study, which reviews around 200 scientific articles published ...

Researchers add a new wrinkle to cell culture

Researchers add a new wrinkle to cell culture
2015-04-23
PROVIDENCE, R.I. [Brown University] -- Using a technique that introduces tiny wrinkles into sheets of graphene, researchers from Brown University have developed new textured surfaces for culturing cells in the lab that better mimic the complex surroundings in which cells grow in the body. "We know that cells are shaped by their surroundings," said Ian Y. Wong, assistant professor of engineering and one of the study's authors. "We've shown that you can make textured environments for cell culture fairly easily using graphene." Traditionally, cell culture in the lab has ...

Fat signals control energy levels in the brain

2015-04-23
An enzyme secreted by the body's fat tissue controls energy levels in the brain, according to new research at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis. The findings, in mice, underscore a role for the body's fat tissue in controlling the brain's response to food scarcity, and suggest there is an optimal amount of body fat for maximizing health and longevity. The study appears April 23 in the journal Cell Metabolism. "We showed that fat tissue controls brain function in a really interesting way," said senior author Shin-ichiro Imai, MD, PhD, professor of ...

Dolphins use extra energy to communicate in noisy waters

Dolphins use extra energy to communicate in noisy waters
2015-04-23
Dolphins that raise their voices to be heard in noisy environments expend extra energy in doing so, according to new research that for the first time measures the biological costs to marine mammals of trying to communicate over the sounds of ship traffic or other sources. While dolphins expend only slightly more energy on louder whistles or other vocalizations, the metabolic cost may add up over time when the animals must compensate for chronic background noise, according to the research by scientists at NOAA Fisheries' Northwest Fisheries Science Center and the University ...

An end to cancer pain?

An end to cancer pain?
2015-04-23
TORONTO, ON. (23 April, 2015) - A new study led by University of Toronto researcher Dr. David Lam has discovered the trigger behind the most severe forms of cancer pain. Released in top journal Pain this month, the study points to TMPRSS2 as the culprit: a gene that is also responsible for some of the most aggressive forms of androgen-fuelled cancers. Head of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery at the Faculty of Dentistry, Lam's research initially focused on cancers of the head and neck, which affect more than 550,000 people worldwide each year. Studies have shown that these ...

Exploring treatment options for women with fibroids

2015-04-23
ROCHESTER, Minn. -- A 47-year-old African-American woman has heavy menstrual bleeding and iron-deficiency anemia. She reports the frequent need to urinate during the night and throughout the day. A colonoscopy is negative and an ultrasonography shows a modestly enlarged uterus with three uterine fibroids, noncancerous growths of the uterus. She is not planning to become pregnant. What are her options? Elizabeth (Ebbie) Stewart, M.D., chair of Reproductive Endocrinology at Mayo Clinic, says the woman has several options, but determining her best option is guided by her ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Researchers find intensive blood pressure targets are cost-effective

A shape-changing antenna for more versatile sensing and communication

New method advances reliability of AI with applications in medical diagnostics

Catching a 'eureka' before it strikes: New research spots the signs

An alphabet for hand actions in the human brain

When rattlesnakes marry their cousins

Mass spectrometry sequencing of circulating antibodies from a malaria-exposed child provides new insight into malaria immunity

SwRI-led work confirms decades-old theoretical models about solar reconnection

New Study identifies early signs of valve failure one year after TAVI, raising durability concerns in younger patients

Untangling glucose traffic jams in Type 2 diabetes

University of Houston professor creates new drug delivery system to tackle lupus

Community-based approach boosts family engagement in ADHD care

Identifying a compass in the human brain

How AI support can go wrong in safety-critical settings

American Geriatrics Society unveils updated alternatives to potentially harmful medications for older adults

Conflicts of interest on CDC vaccine panel were at historic lows before RFK Jr. dismissal

Stapokibart for severe uncontrolled chronic rhinosinusitis with nasal polyps

Brain abnormalities seen in children exposed prenatally to the pesticide chlorpyrifos

Self-reported hearing aid use and risk of incident dementia

Over-the-counter oral contraceptive use and initiation of contraception

Over-the-counter pill boosts access to contraception, OHSU study finds

New research ferments the perfect recipe for fine chocolate flavor

SwRI study supports theory that asteroids Bennu and Ryugu are part of the Polana family

Seabirds only poop while flying

SwRI develops orbital debris detection system for spacecraft

Exploration and dispersal are key traits involved in a rapid range expansion

New study reveals the gene responsible for diverse color patterns in African violet flower

A novel technology to control crystallinity of pore walls

Researchers uncover potential mechanism driving treatment resistance in common breast cancer

Colorado State University shutters animal study after pressure from national research ethics group

[Press-News.org] CCNY researchers use novel polarization to increase data speeds