Measurement Type: Point sensing (FBG) or distributed sensing (Raman/Brillouin). Temperature Range: Ensure compatibility with high-temperature environments. Environment: Evaluate EMI, flammable gas, or corrosive risk factors. Measurement Length: Consider long-distance. Fiber-optic high-temperature sensors are gradually replacing traditional electronic sensors due to their small size, resistance to electromagnetic interference, remote detection, multiplexing, and distributed measurement advantages. This paper reviews the sensing principle, structural design, and. Our fiber optic sensors use a Gallium Arsenide (GaAs) crystal at the fiber tip, making them ideal for highly accurate temperature measurements in environments exposed to microwave radiation and high-frequency interference. Their fully non-metallic, dielectric design ensures complete immunity to. Fiber optic temperature sensors are immune to the many environmental effects that compromise other measurement technologies, can be embedded and installed in locations traditional temperature sensors cannot and deliver an unprecedented level of spatial detail and data without sacrificing precision. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. Temperature measurement can be achieved through various methods, including: However, these traditional systems often suffer from limited immunity to electromagnetic. Yokogawa Electric's Fiber Optic Temperature Sensor DTSX solves these problems.