Title :
Development of free-space digital optics in computing
Author :
Gourlay, James ; Yang, Tsung-Yi ; Dines, Julian A B ; Snowdon, John F. ; Walker, Andrew C.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Phys., Heriot-Watt Univ., Edinburgh, UK
Abstract :
To someone with an electronics or computer science background, many of optical computing´s concepts may seem outlandish. Optics grew out of applied physics and still retains many aspects of that heritage. This is in contrast to digital computing´s roots in electronics. Recent efforts have been made to bring optical computing more in line with microelectronic engineering. Perhaps that will speed the acceptance of opto-electronic technology. The authors describe their research into optical devices for data communication. They are investigating free-space optics, the propagation of optical signals through the air using lenses and mirrors to focus and redirect the beams. The advantages of free-space optics, derive from their large spatial bandwidth and physical channel density. Like the human eye, which takes in an enormous amount of information in parallel, a low-cost lens can provide more than a million independent connections. The authors aim to exploit optoelectronic computing´s capability for such massively parallel data transfers.
Keywords :
data communication; optical communication; optical computing; parallel processing; data communication; digital computing; free-space digital optics; large spatial bandwidth; lenses; massively parallel data transfers; microelectronic engineering; mirrors; optical computing; optical devices; optical signals; physical channel density; Bandwidth; Computer science; Data communication; Lenses; Microelectronics; Mirrors; Optical computing; Optical devices; Optical propagation; Physics;