Undersea fiber-optic cables are like superhighways for information that go across the ocean floor.
Imagine you and your friend have a really long rope, and every time you tie a message to it, you send it flying through the air. That’s how information used to travel between places, by going up in the sky on big birds called satellites. But now, we use cables that go all the way under the sea, like really long ropes that are deep underwater.
How They Work
These cables are made of very thin threads called fibers, and they carry light inside them. Light is super fast, so it can travel across the ocean from one country to another in just a few seconds.
The fibers are wrapped up tightly with other things, like protection for when the cable gets bumped by big rocks or eaten by sea creatures. Sometimes, we even put these cables into tubes so they can be laid down on the ocean floor more easily.
When the light comes out of the cable in another country, it turns back into messages you and your friends can read, like emails, videos, or even games!
It’s like having a super fast tunnel under the sea that lets information zoom from one place to another. No birds needed!
Examples
- Cables on the ocean floor help people talk to each other all over the world.
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See also
- How The Internet Travels Across Oceans?
- How does the internet actually transfer information across the globe?
- How to say Thank You in different languages around the world 🌍🙌?
- Who is Global Communication?
- What is English?