Current and Future Analysis of Submarine Telecom Cable Industry

Current and Future Analysis of Submarine Telecom Cable Industry

A submarine communication cable is a cable that is laid between land-based stations on the sea floor to carry telecommunication signals over stretches of sea and sea. The first submarine communication cables, laid from the 1850s, carried telegraphic traffic and established the first instant telecommunication links between continents, such as the first transatlantic telegraph cable which went into service on August 16, 1858.

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Some of the key players of Submarine Telecom Cable Industry:

Alcatel-Lucent S.A., Google LLC, Hengtong Group CO., Ltd., NEC Corporation, Nexans S.A., NKT A/S, Prysmian Group, Saudi Ericsson Communications Company Limited, SubCom, LLC, ZTT India Private Limited

Subsequent generations of cables carried telephone traffic and then data communications traffic. Modern cables use fiber optic technology to carry digital data, including phone, Internet, and home traffic. Modern cables are typically about 25 millimeters in diameter and weigh about 1.4 tons per kilometer (2.5 short tons per mile; 2.2 long tons per mile) for the deep-sea sections that make up most of the route, despite them Bigger and Bigger Are Heavier cables are used for shallow water stretches near the coast.

Submarine cables first connected all continents of the world (except Antarctica) when Java was connected to Darwin, Northern Territory, Australia in 1871, to the completion of the Australian Overland Telegraph Line in 1872 to and from Adelaide, South Australia with the rest to reach from Australia.

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