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Engineering professor works to speed up internet

Engineering professor works to speed up internet
Keren Bergman. Credit: Eileen Barroso/Columbia University

Keren Bergman gets as aggravated as anyone by how long it takes to email a video of her son's recital to her parents. Unlike most people, Bergman, a professor of electrical engineering and department chair at the engineering school, can do something about it.

Bergman specializes in , and her central research project involves the fiber optic network鈥攖he portion of the Web that consists of optical fibers over which data can be sent in the form of light waves. Fiber optics can handle large files鈥攊ncluding the huge files of high-definition video鈥攆aster than traditional copper wires. Even so, the as it is currently configured isn鈥檛 very efficient.

鈥淚t鈥檚 like one big, dumb pipe,鈥 Bergman says, adding that not much progress can be made if the pipe doesn鈥檛 smarten up. Internet traffic around the world reached 176 billion gigabytes in 2009, according to a report from the networking firm Cisco Systems Inc., an enormous amount of data for a network developed in the 1970s for a few thousand researchers.

Who could have dreamed that the social networking site Facebook would have 600 million users, many of whom, like Bergman, want to upload large video files of their children鈥檚 recitals? Or that the Internet might someday connect doctors at multiple locations via 3-D high-definition conference calls? Both uses require rapid delivery of large, high-quality audio and video files.

At its core the Internet has 鈥渨aterfalls of bandwidth,鈥 Bergman says, and should be able to handle the traffic. But traffic jams start as the volumes of information travel through narrower channels controlled by various Internet service providers. The current optical fibers can鈥檛 recognize what kind of data is coming through; when congestion hits, they are not able to prioritize traffic.

Bergman鈥檚 alternative model would insert a sort of smart switching system鈥攖hink of trains coming into a station and being routed depending on where they鈥檙e going.

In her Lightwave Research Laboratory in Schapiro Hall, Bergman has set up circuit boards with fiber optic nodes designed to represent miniature slices of the Internet. The nodes are programmed to read data and direct it depending on what it is. In a perfect scenario, Bergman鈥檚 smart switching system could prioritize the hundreds of gigabytes carrying a medical video conference over the kilobytes of routine emails.

Bergman鈥檚 research has captured the attention of industry. Alcatel-Lucent Bell Labs and AT&T Research are collaborating with Bergman鈥檚 team on modeling these in their existing systems to see whether it could work on a larger scale. Bergman鈥檚 research team is a principal member of the Center for Integrated Access Networks, a consortium of nine colleges and universities, including Columbia, that鈥檚 based at the University of Arizona in Tucson and is working to solve the high-data transfer problem.

Bergman鈥檚 work has long straddled academia and industry. A graduate of Bucknell University, the Israeli-born Bergman received her Ph.D. in from MIT, after which she landed a teaching position at Princeton, where she still lives with her family. Before coming to Columbia in 2001, she was a consultant for Bell Laboratories and a lead technologist for the networking startup Tellium.

She hopes her research will also help relieve a problem that鈥檚 growing rapidly as computers gain capability: energy usage. 鈥淭he energy consumption of information technology is growing exponentially,鈥 she said.

Most of the energy鈥攗p to 90 percent鈥攑owers hardware (think of an overheated laptop) and copper wiring. Sending data down optical fibers, however, requires a fraction of the energy. Bergman says, 鈥淔or the long haul in communications, it鈥檚 all fiber optics.鈥

Provided by Columbia University

Citation: Engineering professor works to speed up internet (2011, February 24) retrieved 25 May 2025 from /news/2011-02-professor-internet.html
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