New device for ultrafast optical communications
The faint tree-like structures visible on the right side are optical waveguides that bring the light into and out of the optical circuit. The pattern of gratings filters the light signal. The gold traces on the left side supply electrical current to power the device. Credit: Ryan Scott, UC Davis
Tuesday, March 2, 2010
"We have found a way to measure a very high capacity waveform with a combination of standard electronics and optics," said S.J. Ben Yoo, professor of electrical and computer engineering at UC Davis. A paper describing the technology was published Feb. 28 in the journal Nature Photonics.
The device is up to 10,000 times faster than existing technologies for measuring light pulses, Yoo said. It overcomes the limitations of existing approaches, by measuring both the amplitude (intensity) and the phase of a pulse at the same time, and can measure information capacity into the 100 terahertz range in real time. Current electronics are limited to information capacity in tens of gigahertz bandwidth.
Higher-frequency pulses can pack more information into a given length of time. By making it possible to take a complex waveform and quickly decode it into a digital electronic signal, the device would make it possible to pack more data into optical signals.
Operated in reverse, the same kind of device could be used to generate optical signals from electronics.
The device -- developed by Yoo's UC Davis research group, including graduate student Nicolas Fontaine; postdoctoral researchers Ryan Scott, Linjie Zhou and Francisco Soares; and Professor Jonathan Heritage -- divides the incoming signal into slices of frequency spectrum, processes the slices in parallel and then integrates them.
The technology could be used in ultra-high-speed communications and also in LiDAR (light detection and ranging) systems. LiDAR uses pulses of laser light to rapidly scan the landscape and produce highly detailed, three-dimensional images of the Earth's surface.
The next step is to work on putting the whole device into a small silicon chip, Yoo said.
###
University of California - Davis: http://www.ucdavis.edu
Thanks to University of California - Davis for this article.
This article has been viewed 337 time(s).
More Technology
Computer scientists break terabyte sort barrier in 60 secondsComputer scientists from the University of California, San Diego broke "the terabyte barrier" – and a world record – when they sorted more than one terabyte of data (1,000 gigabytes or 1 million megabytes) in just 60 seconds. During this 2010 "Sort Benchmark" competition – the "World Cup of data sorting" – the computer scientists also tied a world record for fastest data sorting rate.
Source: University of California - San Diego | Views: 297 |
Comments: 0Engineers devises new method for securing location-sensitive dataA research group led by computer scientists at the UCLA Henry Samueli School of Engineering and Applied Science has proved that cryptography — the practice and study of hiding information — that is based solely on physical location is possible by using quantum mechanics.
Source: University of California - Los Angeles | Views: 227 |
Comments: 0Not as Web savvy as you thinkGoogle it. That's what many college students do when asked to read an excerpt of a play for class, write a resume or find the e-mail address of a politician.
Source: Northwestern University | Views: 294 |
Comments: 0Keeping trains on trackThousands of people around the world have died in train wrecks caused by natural disasters. In 2004, the tsunami in Southeast Asia derailed a Sri Lankan train, killing 1,700 people. But with modern advances, these tragedies can be avoided ― and a Tel Aviv University researcher, working in collaboration with teams from seven countries, is leading the way.
Source: American Friends of Tel Aviv University | Views: 174 |
Comments: 0Data mining made fasterTo many big companies, you aren't just a customer, but are described by multiple "dimensions" of information within a computer database. Now, a University of Utah computer scientist has devised a new method for simpler, faster "data mining," or extracting and analyzing massive amounts of such data.
Video game processors help lower CT scan radiationA new approach to processing X-ray data could lower by a factor of ten or more the amount of radiation patients receive during cone beam CT scans, report researchers from the University of California, San Diego.
Source: American Institute of Physics | Views: 5422 |
Comments: 0