August 04, 2003

Fast Switches

Roland Piquepaille's Technology Trends

World's First Tunable 'Photon Copier' on a Chip
An interesting discovery leading to all-optical networks was reported last week by Science Daily.
A research team at the University of California at Santa Barbara (UCSB) has for the first time incorporated on a single chip both a widely tunable laser and an all-optical wavelength converter, thereby creating an integrated photonic circuit for transcribing data from one color of light to another.
When data is transmitted over the Internet over optical fibers, it is carried by photon streams of different colors. When data arrives to a node, it often needs to change color for the next segment. Until now, this step implied converting photons to electrons, switching electronically, and converting electrons back to photons.
With this new device, this step is eliminated. Here is a rendering of the device showing both a widely tunable laser and an all-optical wavelength converter on a single chip. (Credit: UCSB College of Engineering)

I guess this means traffic moving faster around the Internet. I wonder if its something our network will be using in the next few years?

Posted by Paul Goodison at August 4, 2003 09:44 AM | TrackBack


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