So yes a few metres of almost any optical fibre will bear light with little loss over a few metres. What will be different, however, is that fibre that is one moded for 1300 - 1600nm will almost certainly be one-moded for visible light. Modes are the possible solutions of the Helmholtz equation for waves, which is obtained by combining. This carefully engineered index contrast confines light within the core through total internal reflection, enabling optical signals to travel with. If I understand things correctly, the optical fibers used for (long-range) data transmissions are generally single-mode fibers, transmitting light in the 1300-1500 nm spectrum. Now, could such a fiber transmit visible light (~400-700 nm) a short distance, say a few meters? Or does the fiber have a. Single-mode fibers (also called monomode fibers) are optical fibers which are designed such that they support only a single propagation mode (LP 01) per polarization direction for a given wavelength. For fiber optics with glass fibers, we use light in the infrared region which has wavelengths longer than visible light, typically around 850, 1300 and 1550 nm.
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