IBM has created a chip that can slow down light, the latest advance in an industrywide effort to develop computers that will use only a fraction of the energy of today's machines.
The chip, called a photonic silicon waveguide, is a piece of silicon dotted with arrays of tiny holes. Scattered systematically by the holes, light shown on the chip slows down to 1/300th of its ordinary speed of 186,000 miles per second. In a computer system, slower light pulses could carry data rapidly, but in an orderly fashion. The light can be further slowed by applying an electric field to the waveguide.
Researchers at Harvard University and the University of California, Berkeley, have slowed light in laboratories. IBM, though, claims that its light-slowing device is the first to be fashioned out of fairly standard materials, potentially paving the way toward commercial adoption.
A number of companies and university researchers are currently tinkering with ways to replace the electronic components inside computers, which ferry signals with electrons, with optical technology. Optical equipment ferries data on photons, the smallest measure of light. Photons are far faster. More important, optical equipment generates less heat, curbing the growing problem of heat and power consumption.
The catch, however, is that until recently, creating optical components has been more of an art than a science. The components cost a lot to make and can't be cranked out in the millions like silicon chips. Another factor: Optical parts are typically big, unlike silicon chips, which measure only a few millimeters on a side.
Progress in blending the best of both technologies is advancing rapidly, however. Intel has demonstrated a Raman laser fashioned from silicon. Intel and start-up Luxtera have shown off silicon modulators, which chop up the light from a laser so that it can represent data.
IBM's silicon waveguide, as the name suggests, would channel light pulses created by the laser and modulator.
When the optical conversion might start to occur is a matter of speculation. Luxtera has said it will start to commercially produce products in 2007. The computer industry, however, tends to move slowly when it comes to major overhauls of computer architecture. Several components will have to be developed before photos can replace electrons inside computers.
A paper providing details on the chip will run in Nature on Wednesday.
I assume IBM didn't actually SLOW the light, as the speed of light is a universal constant. I think they mean with all the holes, IBM made the light take a ziz-zag pattern across the distance, thereby lowering its speed in one direction.
Like a if you did 200 miles of increadibly long zig-zaggy roads @ 40mph, but at the end you were only 1 mile from where you started "as the crow flys". Your speed was still 40, just your speed over that crow-flys distance I guess could be called slow, so to speak.
This has been done in a few labs over the past year or so: <a class="jive-link-external" href="http://www.berkeley.edu/news/media/releases/2005/10/03_slowlight.shtml" target="_newWindow">http://www.berkeley.edu/news/media/releases/2005/10/03_slowlight.shtml</a>
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Like a if you did 200 miles of increadibly long zig-zaggy roads @ 40mph, but at the end you were only 1 mile from where you started "as the crow flys". Your speed was still 40, just your speed over that crow-flys distance I guess could be called slow, so to speak.
<a class="jive-link-external" href="http://www.berkeley.edu/news/media/releases/2005/10/03_slowlight.shtml" target="_newWindow">http://www.berkeley.edu/news/media/releases/2005/10/03_slowlight.shtml</a>
<a class="jive-link-external" href="http://www.msnbc.com/news/242698.asp?cp1=1" target="_newWindow">http://www.msnbc.com/news/242698.asp?cp1=1</a>
<a class="jive-link-external" href="http://www.physorg.com/news6951.html" target="_newWindow">http://www.physorg.com/news6951.html</a>
The linked articles say pretty much the same thing, but I wanted to give multiple views to show it wasn't just media hype and misinformation.