DocumentCode
1276977
Title
The aftermath of 9/11. What light through yonder window breaks? [free-space laser link]
Author
Bansal, Raleev
Author_Institution
ECE, Connecticut Univ., Storrs, CT, USA
Volume
44
Issue
1
fYear
2002
fDate
2/1/2002 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
146
Abstract
The local communication infrastructure was hit hard by the events of September 11. Financial corporations with an urgent need to transmit high-speed data between offices in physically separate locations were particularly affected, and scrambled to come up with viable alternatives to disrupted fiber-optic cables and RF-based wireless networks. According to a report in Conformity (December, 2001), Merrill Lynch turned to free-space optics for setting up a communication link between its office in lower Manhattan and backup offices across the river in Jersey City, New Jersey. The data were transmitted across the 1.6-mile distance via a laser beam. While free-space optics has been around for over thirty years, and has been investigated for many exotic applications such as satellite-to-satellite communication, it has not been used widely in mainstream applications. Merrill Lynch opted for a free-space laser link because such a system could be up and running within a few hours, following a disaster such as the WTC collapse
Keywords
data communication; optical links; 1.6 mile; Jersey City; Manhattan; Merrill Lynch; New Jersey; September 11; World Trade Center; communication; disaster; financial corporation; free-space laser link; free-space optics; high-speed data transmission; local communication infrastructure; Cities and towns; Communication cables; High speed optical techniques; Laser beams; Optical beams; Optical fiber cables; Optical fiber communication; Rivers; Terrorism; Wireless networks;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Antennas and Propagation Magazine, IEEE
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1045-9243
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/74.997948
Filename
997948
Link To Document