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A 10 °C difference in temperature produces enough electricity to transmit 13 bytes of information per second.
Researchers have recently reported sending over 100 terabits of information per second through an optical fiber, New Scientist recently reported.
Even more impressive: the transmission rate was one gigabyte of chaos-encrypted information per second – comparable to that of most commercial data transmissions.
Because of its exceptional electronic properties, devices made of the material can work at very high frequencies, and could in principle handle more information per second.
The early digital video recording equipment used by professionals needed around 200 megabits of information per second to match the picture quality of the analogue equivalent.
The degree of chaos is quantified by the Kolmogorov entropy, which is a measure of the rate of loss of information in the system (expressed in bits of information per second).
Similar(43)
show that thalamic relay synapse properties are tuned to maximize not bits of information transmitted per second but bits of information transmitted per ATP molecule used.
The results of each simulation include the following information, averaged per second: Diff.
The throughput is measured as the average number of decoded information bits per second.
The supported input data rate of each buffer is assumed to be R d information bits per second.
And it takes a 100-flea-hops of energy to transmit just a few hundred information bits per second, never mind kilobits or megabits.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com