• DocumentCode
    795457
  • Title

    Linking with light [high-speed optical interconnects]

  • Author

    Savage, Neil

  • Volume
    39
  • Issue
    8
  • fYear
    2002
  • fDate
    8/1/2002 12:00:00 AM
  • Firstpage
    32
  • Lastpage
    36
  • Abstract
    Having proven their worth in long-distance communications, photons will soon take over inside the computer. So some researchers say that, within just a few years, many of the copper connections in computers will yield to high-speed optical interconnects, in which photons, rather than electrons, will pass signals from board to board, or chip to chip, or even from one part of a chip to another. The idea is simple in principle, and parallels telecommunications systems. An electrical signal from the processor would modulate a miniature laser beam, which would shine through the air or a waveguide to a photodetector, which would in turn pass the signal on to the electronics. Though at the moment it is more expensive to communicate with light than with electric current, the day is coming when only optical technologies will be able to keep up with the demands of ever-more-powerful microprocessors, just as they are now the only reasonable way to move the world´s Internet traffic across the kilometers.
  • Keywords
    microprocessor chips; optical computing; optical interconnections; Internet traffic; high-speed optical interconnects; laser beam modulation; long-distance communications; microprocessors; optical technologies; photodetector; photons; processor; waveguide; Copper; Electrons; Joining processes; Optical computing; Optical interconnections; Optical modulation; Optical waveguides; Signal processing; Telecommunication computing; Waveguide lasers;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Spectrum, IEEE
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0018-9235
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/MSPEC.2002.1021941
  • Filename
    1021941