Gemini (submarine communications cable) explained

Cable Name:Gemini (North/South)
Owners:Gemini SCSL
Technology:Fiber optics
Design Capacity:60 + 55 Gb/s SDH
Length:Ca. 12600 km

Gemini was a submarine communications cable system privately owned by Gemini SCSL linking the United States and the United Kingdom via parallel north and south routes.

Cable system

The installation of the system was a joint venture between Cable & Wireless and WorldCom Inc.[1] The cable system was considered operational in 1998. The cable system was approximately 12600 km combined between its north and south routes, with landing stations in Charlestown, Rhode Island; Oxwich Bay, Wales; Manasquan, New Jersey; and Porthcurno, England.[2]

The cable was decommissioned in 2004, because the terminal transmission technology became obsolete. Portions of the cable were recovered for redeployment for the HUGO cable system. Additional pieces of the Gemini cable were reused in systems connecting Bermuda, Tortola and Jamaica to the United States.[3]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Gemini Submarine Cable System Ltd.,. Lightwave. 25 April 2018.
  2. Web site: History of the Atlantic Cable & Undersea Communications. atlantic-cable.com. 25 April 2018.
  3. Web site: Submarine salvage: a second life for old cables. Fibre Systems. 25 April 2018.