Corning Receives IEEE Milestone
Award for Invention of First Low-Loss
Optical Fiber
Commemorative plaque to
be installed at Sullivan
Park Research
Center
CORNING, N.Y., May 1,
2012 -- Corning
Incorporated (NYSE: GLW) announced today that it has received a
Milestone Award in Electrical Engineering and Computing from the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE)
for the invention of low-loss optical fiber, which played a pivotal role in
changing the way the world communicates. The IEEE Milestone Award recognizes
significant technical achievement and innovation that occurred at least 25
years ago.
“Corning is honored to receive this highly
prestigious award from IEEE,” said Marty Curran, senior vice president and general
manager, Corning
Optical Fiber. “Corning ’s
1970 invention of low-loss optical fiber, and the manufacturing process used to
produce it, together revolutionized the telecommunications industry and changed
the world forever. The explosion of the Internet and other information
technologies would not have been possible without optical fiber. Only optical
fiber provides the nearly limitless bandwidth required for high-speed
transmission of voice, data, and video the world depends on for the way we
live, work, and play.” Today, there are more than 1.6 billion kilometers of
fiber installed around the world.
Low-loss optical fiber was
invented by three Corning scientists – Dr. Robert Maurer, Dr. Peter Schultz, and Dr. Donald Keck
– after representatives of the British Post Office came to Corning in the mid-1960s seeking assistance
in creating pure glass fiber optics. The scientists produced an optical fiber
having a total attenuation of about 17 decibels per kilometer, far superior to
the best bulk optical glasses of the day, which had attenuations of
approximately 1,000 dB/km. In recognition of this achievement, Drs. Maurer,
Schultz and Keck have been inducted into the Inventors Hall of Fame and were
awarded the National Medal of Technology in 2000.
“The demonstration of low-loss
transmission through optical fiber showed us immediately that optical
communications could be practical,” said Gordon Day, IEEE president and CEO.
“But few recognized, or could have recognized, that in a few decades it would
change the lives of almost everyone in the world. The first low-loss fiber was
a truly defining moment in the history of technology in the 20th century.”
The IEEE Milestone Award plaque
will be unveiled during a ceremony at 3 p.m. today at Corning ’s
Sullivan Park Research
Center , the site where
optical fiber was invented.
The IEEE Milestone in
Electrical Engineering and Computing Award is an initiative of the IEEE History
Center . Since
establishing the program in 1983, the IEEE has awarded more than 100 Milestone
awards around the world. The IEEE Milestones recognize the work of leading
inventors, including Benjamin Franklin, Samuel F. B. Morse, Alexander Graham
Bell, and Thomas Edison; and innovative companies, including Westinghouse,
Philips, IBM, and HP. This most recent IEEE Milestone dedication is sponsored
by the IEEE Photonics Society, which is focused on the field of quantum
electronics.
About Corning Incorporated
Corning Incorporated (www.corning.com) is the world leader in specialty glass and ceramics. Drawing on more than 160 years of materials science and process engineering knowledge,
About IEEE
IEEE, the world's largest technical professional organization, is dedicated to advancing technology for the benefit of humanity. Through its highly cited publications, conferences, technology standards, and professional and educational activities, IEEE is the trusted voice on a wide variety of areas ranging from aerospace systems, computers and telecommunications to biomedical engineering, electric power and consumer electronics. Learn more at http://www.ieee.org.
About the IEEE Photonics
Society
The IEEE Photonics Society, formerly the IEEE Lasers and Electro-Optics Society (LEOS), is the technical community within IEEE that focuses on optoelectronic and photonic materials, devices and systems. Its members engaged in research, development, design, and manufacture in photonics. The Society sponsors leading publications and conferences in Photonics and has 75+ chapters worldwide. Learn more at http://www.photonicssociety.org.
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