Duke 'All-optical' Switch Could Advance Light-Based Telecommunications

edited May 2005 in Science & Tech
Duke University physicists have developed a switching technique that uses a very weak beam of light to control a much stronger beam. The achievement could make optical telecommunications devices perform far more efficiently, and perhaps also aid in the development of futuristic quantum communications devices, the scientists said.
"What's important here is that this is an 'all-optical' switch, using only light, with a weak beam affecting a strong one," said physics professor Daniel Gauthier, the Duke team leader.

Such a switching technique could improve today's telecommunications switching arrays that must repeatedly and inefficiently convert light to electricity and then back to light -- a method especially impractical for very high speed telecommunications networks, Gauthier said in an interview.

Until now, Gauthier said, scientists have primarily demonstrated switching techniques that use stronger light beams to control weaker ones. "And that's not very useful in a telecommunications networking device because you would need a lot of energy to switch a tiny amount," he said.

Gauthier and other team members will describe their findings in the Friday, April 29, 2005, issue of the research journal Science, in a report whose first author is Gauthier's graduate student Andrew Dawes. Additional co-authors are Gauthier's post-doctoral research associate Lucas Illing and former Duke physics undergraduate Susan Clark, who is now in graduate study at Stanford University.
Source: Science Daily

Comments

  • CyrixInsteadCyrixInstead Stoke-on-Trent, England Icrontian
    edited May 2005
    Why do I always hear about these amazing technologies that are researched, and that should be in my home in the next 5-10 years, but nothing ever comes of it?

    ~Cyrix
  • FAH_WWFAH_WW Training in Indianapolis, IN
    edited May 2005
    It's because there are other technologies which provide a better way of getting cash for it or out of it ;)

    Top example is probably ADSL - proving that there was life in the old copper yet :D
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