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Wavelengths Explained: The Fastest Line Between Point A and B

Elliot Sheffield Posted On January 16, 2026
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Two individuals holding tablets stand in front of a large screen with graphs, while one of them points at the screen and the other listens.

Every day, businesses move staggering amounts of data between data centers, clouds and offices. Most of this traffic travels on shared networks, much like rush hour on a crowded highway. But what if your mission critical workloads need higher capacity, more speed and more security? That is where wavelengths come in.

Imagine Your Own Data Expressway

Picture a Formula 1 car on a private expressway with no traffic and no speed limits, just a clear shot from start to finish. That is the power of a wavelength, a dedicated high-capacity connection that moves your data at the speed of light directly from point A to point B. No congestion. No slowdowns. Maximum scalability and security.

What Is A Wavelength?

A wavelength is a dedicated high-capacity point-to-point connectivity service that uses optical fiber to carry massive amounts of data with very low latency. Through a technique called Dense Wave Division Multiplexing (DWDM), modern optical networks can transmit multiple colors of light (wavelengths) at the same time through a single fiber, creating a private multi-lane superhighway. Each lane is isolated, so your data can travel securely and without interference from other traffic.

How Do Wavelengths Work?

A wavelength works by converting your electronic data into pulses of light, each traveling on its own lane within a fiber optic cable. You can think of it as giving your data its own color of light so it moves independently and does not get mixed with other traffic. Specialized equipment at each end converts your data into light, sends it down the fiber and then turns it back into electronic signals at the destination.

Because this light travels on a direct optical path, your data moves incredibly fast with minimal loss or delay. Today’s wavelength services offer speeds such as 10 Gbps, 100 Gbps and 400 Gbps, with even higher rates like 800G and 1.6T on the horizon. Multiple wavelengths can run on the same fiber, allowing you to move enormous amounts of data in seconds. For a visual breakdown of how massive new data demands are driving network innovation, check out this infographic.

An infographic shows the time required to move 1 petabyte of data across various speeds, with 1 Gbps requiring 104 days and 400 Gbps requiring only 6 hours 15 minutes.

AI requires massive amount of data. Traditional connectivity struggles to match the capacity or speeds required to efficiently feed AI models.

If you’re interested in learning how these advances in high-speed connectivity will power the evolution of cloud architectures and prepare businesses for what’s next, explore our Cloud 2.0 report.

When Do Companies Use Wavelengths?

Businesses rely on wavelength services when they need scalable, high-capacity connectivity between specific sites. Common use cases include:

  • AI and analytics that require transferring massive datasets between compute clusters
  • Data center interconnects for synchronizing databases or large-scale backups
  • Cloud access with direct private connections to major cloud providers
  • Media and entertainment workflows like streaming, broadcasting and moving large video files
  • Disaster recovery or network diversity with a ready-to-activate backup connection

How Wavelengths Compare With Other Network Options

Wavelengths are among multiple network options your business can explore to find what best fits its individual needs.

Option How it works Best for  
Internet Public network that carries everyone’s traffic Unscaled everyday web use and SaaS applications   
Ethernet/Private WAN   Private connections that link multiple sites through packet switching   Branch or campus networks where flexibility matters  
Wavelengths Dedicated optical channel between two fixed points High-volume or latency-sensitive workloads  
Dark Fiber   You lease or own the fiber and operate your own optical gear Organizations that want complete control and have in-house expertise  

A wavelength sits between Ethernet and dark fiber. It delivers the control and performance of owning fiber, without the cost or complexity of managing it yourself.

Ready to put your data in the fast lane?

Wavelengths deliver the speed, security and scalability modern businesses require. If your workloads cannot afford delays, it may be time to consider a dedicated wavelength connection.

Explore Wavelengths today and learn why Lumen ranked #1 in Wavelengths Services in North America.¹

Learn more

 

¹Vertical Systems Group, Year-end U.S. Wavelength LEADERBOARD, 2024.

This content is provided for informational purposes only and may require additional research and substantiation by the end user. In addition, the information is provided “as is” without any warranty or condition of any kind, either express or implied. Use of this information is at the end user’s own risk. Lumen does not warrant that the information will meet the end user’s requirements or that the implementation or usage of this information will result in the desired outcome of the end user. All third-party company and product or service names referenced in this article are for identification purposes only and do not imply endorsement or affiliation with Lumen. This document represents Lumen products and offerings as of the date of issue. Services not available everywhere. Lumen may change or cancel products and services or substitute similar products and services at its sole discretion without notice. ©2026 Lumen Technologies. All Rights Reserved.

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Related posts:

  1. Wavelengths, reimagined: How AI and automation are redefining network control
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Author

Elliot Sheffield

Elliot Sheffield leads strategic product marketing initiatives that bring transformative network solutions to market. With a focus on products within the Lumen Core Network Services portfolio, including Wavelengths, he spearheads go-to-market strategies. Elliot’s expertise, background and experience bridge marketing automation, enterprise automation and networking.

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