Japan has officially set a new world record for internet speed—and the numbers are almost hard to believe. A research team led by the National Institute of Information and Communications Technology (NICT), in collaboration with Sumitomo Electric Industries, has achieved a data transmission rate of 1.02 petabits per second (Pbps). To put that in perspective, that’s 1,020,000,000 megabits per second (Mbps)—enough bandwidth to download over 1,500 full-length 80 GB games or HD movies in less than a second.
But speed alone isn’t the most important part of this breakthrough. While previous records, such as 319 Tbps in 2021 and 1.7 Pbps in 2023, demonstrated impressive bandwidth, those were limited to relatively short distances. What makes this recent achievement significant is the capacity-distance product: the data was transmitted over 1,100 miles (approximately 1,800 km) of optical fiber, simulating a real-world internet backbone. The result? A capacity-distance metric of 1.86 exabits per second-kilometers, currently the highest ever recorded.
Maintaining signal integrity across such distances is no easy task. Optical signals weaken over long distances—a major challenge in building high-speed fiber networks. To overcome this, the research team used optical amplification relaysand looped the signal through the same stretch of cable 21 times to simulate long-distance travel without actually laying thousands of miles of fiber. This method provided real-world accuracy while minimizing logistical barriers.
Perhaps most remarkably, this was accomplished using existing fiber-optic infrastructure. Instead of requiring larger cables or wider installations, the team utilized a 19-core fiber developed by Sumitomo Electric. Unlike standard cables that use a single data-carrying core, this fiber integrates 19 separate cores within the industry-standard cladding diameter of just 0.125 mm—meaning it can be deployed using today’s fiber infrastructure without massive overhauls.
A key technical challenge was ensuring these 19 separate data streams didn’t interfere with one another. To address this, researchers applied MIMO (Multiple Input, Multiple Output) processing, a technique more commonly seen in wireless communications. MIMO allowed them to untangle the overlapping data streams at the receiving end, turning the bundled transmissions back into clean, usable data.
While this breakthrough remains in the experimental phase, its implications are massive. In the future, telecom providers could scale their networks dramatically without needing to dig new trenches or install bulkier cables. Instead, they could use existing conduits, swap in multi-core fibers, and unlock petabit-level speeds that would support 6G, AR/VR applications, autonomous vehicles, and the increasing demand from AI workloads and cloud computing.
Of course, several barriers still need to be addressed before widespread implementation. Issues like signal interference between cores, production scalability, and the need for new compatible network hardware must be resolved. But the foundational work is now in place, and the roadmap toward ultra-high-speed global internet infrastructure just got a lot clearer.
For now, it’s a glimpse into the near future—one where the limits of internet speed may no longer be technical, but logistical.