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Ken Kubos
 
Default Slower light could mean faster computers...

http://www.physorg.com/news86020510.html

Slower light could mean faster computers

IBM today announced its researchers have built a device capable of delaying
the flow of light on a silicon chip, a requirement to one day allow
computers to use optical communications to achieve better performance.

Researchers have known that the use of optical instead of electrical signals
for transferring data within a computer chip might result in significant
performance enhancements since light signals can carry more information
faster. Yet, "buffering" or temporarily holding data on the chip is critical
in controlling the flow of information, so a means for doing so with light
signals is necessary. The work announced today outlines just such a means
for buffering optical signals on a chip.

"Today's more powerful microprocessors are capable of performing much more
work if we can only find a way to increase the flow of information within a
computer," said Dr. T.C. Chen, vice president of Science and Technology for
IBM Research. "As more and more data is capable of being processed on a
chip, we believe optical communications is the way to eliminate these
bottlenecks. As a result, the focus in high-performance computing is
shifting from improvements in computation to those in communication within
the system."

Long delays can be achieved by passing light through optical fibers.
However, the current "delay line" devices for doing so are too large for use
on a microchip, where space is precious and expensive. For practical on-chip
integration, the area of a delay line should be well below one square
millimeter and its construction should be compatible with current chip
manufacturing techniques.

IBM scientists were able to meet this size restriction and achieve the
necessary level of control of the light signal by passing it through a new
form of silicon-based optical delay line built of up to 100 cascaded
"micro-ring resonators," built using current silicon complementary
metal-oxide-semiconductor (CMOS) fabrication tools. When the optical
waveguide is curved to form a ring, light is forced to circle multiple
times, delaying its travel. The optical buffer device based on this simple
concept can briefly store 10 bits of optical information within an area of
0.03 square millimeters. That's 10 percent of the storage density of a
floppy disk, and a great improvement compared to previous results. This
advancement could potentially lead to integrating hundreds of these devices
on one computer chip, an important step towards on-chip optical
communications.

The report on this work, "Ultra-compact optical buffers on a silicon chip,"
by Fengnian Xia, Lidija Sekaric and Yurii Vlasov of IBM's T.J.Watson
Research Center in Yorktown Heights, N.Y., is published December 22 in the
premiere issue of the journal Nature Photonics.

Source: IBM

--

Ken

"Buddhism elucidates why we are sentient."
"Karma means that you don't get away with anything."



 
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