Have you ever wondered how the internet travels across oceans in seconds? When you send a 🌍 message, watch a YouTube video, or play an online game with someone in another country, your data often travels thousands of kilometers through submarine cables hidden deep under the ocean floor. These fiber-optic submarine cables are the backbone of the global internet, carrying over 95–99% of international data traffic between continents. Inside these cables are ultra-thin glass fibers that transmit information using pulses of light at incredible speeds. Today, there are around 600 submarine cables worldwide, stretching more than 1.4 million kilometers across the oceans and connecting countries around the planet. In this video, you’ll discover:<br />1. How submarine cables send internet data as light<br />2. How engineers install cables across the ocean floor<br />3. Why satellites carry only a tiny portion of internet traffic<br />4. How these underwater cables connect the entire world<br />The internet may feel wireless, but in reality, it relies on a vast hidden network beneath the ocean that keeps the digital world running. If you enjoy science, technology, and fascinating facts about how the <br />world works, make sure to subscribe for more educational videos!<br />#SubmarineCables #InternetInfrastructure #HowInternetWorks #TechnologyExplained #InternetFacts <br />#FiberOptic #ScienceExplained #TechEducation #OceanTechnology #DigitalWorld
