Monday, May 21, 2012

T-rays produce 3Gbps short-range wireless, make WiFi pout in the corner

T-rays produce 3Gbps short-range wireless, make WiFi pout in the corner

The last time we saw T-rays, they were busy scanning bodies for tumors and security threats. Six researchers from the Tokyo Institute of Technology are now aiming the terahertz-level frequencies at a less organic target: fast wireless. Running at 542GHz, a rate that makes 60GHz ultra wideband look pokey, the scientists are sending data through the ether at about 3Gbps. The speed isn't as fast as the 7Gbps peak of WiGig, and the bandwidth runs dry at just 33 feet away, but it comes out of a resonant tunneling diode measuring 0.04 square inches — definitely small enough to fit into a smartphone.

2DayBlog.com, T-rays produce 3Gbps short-range wireless, make WiFi pout in the corner

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