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Robert D. Maurer - Inventor
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Robert D. Maurer

description Robert D. Maurer Overview

Robert D. Maurer was a physicist instrumental in developing early optical fiber technology. His work at Corning Corporation resulted in the creation of the first low-loss optical fiber in 1970. This innovation fundamentally advanced communications and is particularly relevant to engineers, telecommunications professionals, and those studying the history of materials science.

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Robert D. Maurer ranks #27 of 424 in the Inventor ranking, behind Satoshi Nakamoto, ahead of André-Marie Ampère.

help Robert D. Maurer FAQ

What exactly was Robert D. Maurer known for in optical fiber history?

Robert D. Maurer is known for work at Corning Corporation that produced the first low-loss optical fiber. The 1970 milestone is the key date most often cited in his profile.

Why was the low-loss fiber breakthrough so important in 1970?

Low-loss fiber made it practical to carry optical signals over much longer distances with less signal degradation. That shift changed early telecommunications from a concept to a scalable network technology.

Did Peter C. Schultz and Narinder Singh Kapany have the same role in this area?

The description links Schultz with Kapany and a parallel practical glass optical fiber breakthrough in 1970. Maurer is separately associated with Corning, so people often study these as related but distinct innovation tracks.

How did this impact modern communication systems?

Modern fiber systems still rely on the same principle of low attenuation in glass media for high-bandwidth transmission. Maurer's 1970 work is therefore still referenced as one of the enabling moments in global communications.

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