Researchers at the University of Pittsburgh announced that they have
discovered a means of wirelessly transmitting data thousands of times
faster than current standards, PCMag reported on Wednesday. The
team is led by Hrvoje Petek, a physics and chemistry professor at the
university, who has theoretically found a way to transmit data between
devices in the terahertz frequency. Petek’s discovery of “a physical
basis for terahertz bandwidth” could potentially be used to leverage the
“portion of the electromagnetic spectrum between infrared and microwave
light” and transmit data at rates 1,000 times faster than today’s
wireless standards, which are limited to the gigahertz frequency. “The
ability to modulate light with such a bandwidth could increase the
amount of information carried by more than 1,000 times when compared to
the volume carried with today’s technologies,” Petek said. “Needless to
say, this has been a long-awaited discovery in the field.”
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