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Optical computer

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An optical computer is a computer that uses bound electrons in isolating crystals instead of free electrons in transistors for computation. Its digital signals are modulated onto a carrier wave in the visible region. No modulator or demodulator exists, because the base band offers only 10 GHz bandwidth whereas the visible band offers 10 THz. It is like doing digital computation by a radio.

One fundamental limit is the size. Optical fibres on an integrated optic chip are ten times wider than the traces on an integrated electronics circuit chip. The crystals have the same cross-section as the fibres, but need a length of about 1 mm and so are much larger than a transistor. Therefore signal traveling times will be large.

A more practical limit is the crystal. Current crystals need light with 1 GW/cm² intensity. And as a typical die (in microelectronics) is about 1 cm², and some absorption takes place, this means kilowatts of power consumption, which only allows pulsed operation, but nanotubes may reduce this in the future.

The biggest advantage in the near future is the synergy with optical telecommunication.

It performs its computation with photons or polaritons as opposed to the more traditional electron-based computation. Optical computing is a major branch of the study of photonics and polaritonics. Electronics computations sometimes involve communications via photonic pathways. Popular devices of this class include FDDI interfaces. In order to send the information via photons, electronic signals are converted via lasers and the light guided down the optical fiber.

No true optical computers are declassified or otherwise known to exist. Some devices that are best classified as switches have been tested in the laboratory. Transistors that are composed entirely of optical components are themselves still very new and experimental.

A fully functional computer is composed of many transistors. The number of them required to constitute a computer is arguable, but probably at least 10 and more often 1,000,000 transistors are required to do general computing tasks.

Currently, no true optical computers yet exist. The problems of design seem to stem from eliminating the conversion from photons to electrons and back. This conversion is necessary now because we don't have all-optical versions of all the myriad switching devices required by a computer.

Interestingly, modern (normal) electronic computers are taking on significant radio wave properties by themselves. Since the frequency of the system clocks on fast systems has passed the single gigahertz range, circuit designers must consider that any electronic signal varying at such rates will be giving off radio waves at that frequency. This means that a wire in a computer performs the dual function of a conductor of electricity and a waveguide for a gigahertz frequency radio wave.

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