Forty years ago vacuum tube computers produced more heat than work, and
were slower than an sixth-grader on a slide rule. Yet, they laid the ground
work for the invention that topped off the 1940's ... AT&T's tiny transistor.
Who could have visualized the revolution that was about to take place? Now
we are into the 90's, maybe rethinking certain assumptions is in order.
I'd like to describe the photonic transistor (patent #5,093,802), a project that
I feel may be a very important piece of technology.
What is a "photonic transistor?" It is a transistor that uses light instead of
electricity. "Oh, solar?" No! I said light instead of electricity!
"Ah! It must be one of those Self-electro-optic Effect Devices reported in the
press recently...right?" Nope! No electro anything, just light. No
electrons at all. Photons, the basic substance of light, do the work in
photonic transistors, not electrons.
Why convert to light? Won't electronic performance just continue
improving? No, again. Technology is reaching the end of its rope with
electrons. Given the newest methods of atomic scale manufacturing, the
basic physics of the electron places restrictions on electron speed and
functionality within a semiconductor. Yet the demand for increased
computing power grows daily.
Photons are faster than electrons and can carry more information, easier.
That's why the phone companies are switching from copper wire to optical
fiber. However, no one has built a practical device that makes one light
beam switch another light beam on and off, a process similar to the one used
by electrons do in a conventional transistor--that is, until now. So, why do
photons work better than electrons, and how do photonic transistors cure the
problem?
Faster! Less money! Unfortunately this trend is true for computers and not
for sports cars. An ever-growing demand for faster, yet economical
communications exists. However, trying to process reams information in a
supercomputer is like trying to get thousands of commuters to work on time.
The faster we get the drivers to work, the quicker the work gets done.
Electrons inside a computer chip are not like race cars merrily zipping around
Daytona Speedway. They're more a kin to traffic on the Los Angeles
freeway--backed up, bunched up, and bogged down. While a large number
of cars do make it through the maze during rush hour traffic, the individual
driver takes a considerable amount of time getting to work. Continuing this
analogy, an electronic transistor shortens a driver's commute by using a form
of mass transit. When a bit of information is shoved into one end of a wire,
the original electrons carrying this information are not the same ones that
deliver it at the other end. Rather, the electrons smack into each other, one
after the other, until some of them get shoved out the other end. However,
even at today's clock speeds this "bus trip" distorts a signal trying to make it
to the other end of a mother board, drowning it in traffic noise.
Unfortunately, using transistors in a computer chip can also be likened to
putting stop lights on a freeway. They direct the moving streams of electrons
from one intersection to another, but because of inductance, capacitance, and
resistance, traffic gets all bunched up behind the red lights. On green
electrons have to wait their turn to accelerate up to speed, only to pile into
one another at the next red light.
As a result, chip designers are forced to slow down the traffic flow to
maintain some semblance of order within the whole process. The composite
electronic device plods along having to wait for the slowest parts to catch up
with the rest. This bumper-car action between silicon stop lights, makes each
electron less like an automobile, and more like a horse cart full of lead
bricks. It will get the driver to work, but not in any real hurry.
Chip designers are doing everything they can to get the lead out. First they
put in lots of traffic lanes, then they put the stop lights closer together.
Switching times decreased, current flow and heat dissipation were reduced,
information processing got a little quicker. So every few years they come
out with a new and improved silicon road maze for electron bumper-cars.
The bumper-car effect prevents traffic lanes from being put very close
together. As the stop lights get closer, fewer electrons make it through. Soon
traffic at one light is slopping back into the light before it. Thus, the
inherent construction of electrons makes them less than ideal information
carriers.
The ideal information carrier would have to be free from inductance,
capacitance, and resistance. It must move rapidly and directly from source to
destination. Lanes must be able to crisscross each other simultaneously in the
same 3-D space without any degradation in signal quality or cross talk
between channels. It must be able to sort, select, switch, and direct the traffic
flow instantly. Every channel must be an express lane. Everything must
move at the same speed, top speed, all the time. No slow downs, no pileups.
Squashed into gas fumed grid lock, each driver sees the stop light change
long before the cars get moving. If all drivers could get to work at the speed
of light, "rush hour" would become "rush second"! Replacing electrons with
photons means that MegaFLOPS would become TeraFLOPS and beyond.
Thus, light is superior to electricity; it is the ideal information carrier.
But, how do these qualities figure into real photonic computers? The best
electronic gates can switch a little better than 10 times in a nanosecond. If
they are really tiny and placed extremely close together the switched signal
(but not the exact electrons themselves) may have made it a hair's width
through the semiconductor. However, in that same nanosecond, photons
carrying that exact same bit of information will have traveled nearly a foot.
photonic transistors can be made about as small as electronic ones, so same
that same bit of information could have been through millions of operations
in that same nanosecond. Why? Because the light pulse doesn't bog down at
each gate. It can be sent through millions of photonic transistors in the same
time as electrons take to wade through only a hand full. Thus, computers
made with photonic transistors will be able to operate hundreds of thousands
of times faster than their electronic counterparts...even in serial.
Broken down into individual little pieces, or pixels, that single image
becomes millions of individual information-carrying beams of light. In a
photonic computer each beam of light can undergo millions of calculations in
a short amount of time and space. That single image represents not just
millions of individual pixel beams, but millions of operations preformed on
millions of beams simultaneously. Because these composite images are
continually being modified as computation proceeds within the photonic
transistors, they are called "Dynamic Images." Electronic circuits are simply
left in the dust when trying to match that kind of "massive parallelism."
As you might expect, photonic transistors are not whittled out of silicon.
Instead they are made out of photographs. Inexpensive photographs. While
the many beams could be interconnected using conventional optics, the
versatility of the hologram makes it an ideal medium for hooking photonic
transistors together and interconnecting photonic-transistor-produced dynamic
images. Holographic interconnection has been a part of the present
technology for nearly 20 years. What's needed are functioning photonic
transistors to complete the interconnection.
In order to be practical, photonic transistors must be simple. They must be
easy to design, interconnect, and manufacture. They must be easy to
understand. In order to be patented they must be so simple that people say,
"Now, why didn't I think of that?" So, among all of these massively parallel
light beams, carrying immense amounts of information at the speed of light,
let me focus on one tiny little function of one tiny little photonic transistor
and show you how it works.
Taken at their most basic level, electronic computers operate using only a
small number of circuit types repeated many times over. The transistors used
to make them are arranged to imitate Boolean algebra. These simple
operations can be combined to from all of mathematics; thus, they can form
all of computing. Some of these basic operations are OR, AND, NOT, and
exclusive OR (abbreviated XOR.) Connected together they make up the
familiar NOR and NAND gates worked with in electronics design every day.
According to Boolean math, only two are required to produce all of the
others, and all of computing. For example, an AND tied into a NOT makes
a NAND. If you wanted to, you could make an entire computer composed
strictly of 74LS00 NAND gates, even if each pulse does waste 10 ns to travel
from an input pin to its output pin.
While the NANDs and NORs are most common in electronic computers, two
others are of special interest in photonics. They are the OR and the XOR.
I'm sure examples of these two types of circuits are familiar to you.
As with the other boolean functions, combinations of these two types of
circuits can create all of mathematics and every type of circuit that a
computer needs, including memory. The photonic transistor preforms these
two functions beautifully and swiftly, along with signal amplification, and a
number of analog functions.
Back in 1801 Thomas Young preformed an experiment that proved that light
does has a wavelike nature. He did this by setting up an experiment whereby
two beams of light from a common source were superimposed upon each
other (see Figure 1). The light pattern produced was called interference,
which can be measured in a manner similar to ocean waves. Later individual
photons were also shown to possess this ability.
Today, we commonly use lasers and a Michelson Interferometer to
demonstrate the effects of interference, even though the geometric
configuration of the Young experiment differs from Michelson's. What is
important here is that two beams of light from a coherent source are
recombined by superimposing one beam on top of the other.
Figure 2 is a close-up of the light pattern in figure 1. It has three sections,
so first examine the lower one that shows the bands of light and dark. This
figure illustrates what is called an interference fringe, which
results from the recombination of two beams. The light portion is called
constructive interference (CI) and the area of darkness called
destructive interference (DI). (These terms are misnomers, for
nothing is really constructed nor is anything destroyed.)
Photons affect one another differently when the two beams are traveling
together than when only a single beam is present. When both beams are on,
interference causes the photons to migrate toward each other. Photons that
ordinarily would have been flying in the DI areas have been pulled to the
side into the CI areas.
However, when only a single beam is on, no interference is present, and the
entire area is illuminated as depicted in the center section of Figure 2. The
photonic transistor exploits this natural effect in order to produce the two
Boolean functions, OR and XOR.
Like all Boolean operators, the photonic transistor has two inputs; the two
light beams of Figure 1. Switching these beams on and off can represent
binary bits of information. Now take a look at the top section of Figure 2. It
has no light at all, representing when both beams are off, a moot case. Thus
Figure 2 depicts three states:
Place the paper so that the hole is lined up with the area "A" in Figure 2
labeled "A". In the moot case, both beams are off, so no light is output
through the hole.
Now move the paper down to the center section to area "B". This point
represents the exact same location as A, only now one of the beams has been
activated. Note that either beam will turn on the output. Although there is no
interference fringe, light is still output through the hole.
Now move your paper down to the lower section, to the area labeled "C".
Again, this point represents the exact same position, only now both beams
are on and the interference fringe has come into existence. Note that light is
output through the hole. In fact, the light coming through the hole is 4 times
brighter because of the CI than it is when only one beam is on at position B.
That there is output through the hole in the paper mask when both input
beams are on is what is important.
In your hand you hold a photonic transistor, albeit macro in size and crude in
appearance. In this position relative to the fringe, it provides the OR
function. Light coming from the paper, through the hole in the mask to your
eye travels at the highest speed known. It didn't have to slow down or
introduce any delays in providing this basic function.
Now move the mask so the hole is over position "F". What's different? Both
beams are still on, but because of the DI, the photons have been shoved to
the side, out of alignment with the line of sight through the hole. The input
light is now reflected into another pathway, absorbed, or whatever by the
mask. So the output through the hole is OFF. The device is a light-speed
XOR.
Notice that without the mask, light from the two inputs would still exist in
the output. Without the separation of these fringe component regions, the
function is lost. The information manifested by the existence of the fringe
disappears when beams of light from the separate regions is mingled back
together again. Only with the mask in place does a separation of the
information occur in the fringe component regions.
An interesting thing happens, though, when a CI positioned mask is operated
with one beam always on. When the second beam is off, the output is on
because this constant "bias" beam is on. Now, when the second beam is
turned on, interference relocates photons that used to be in the DI areas into
the CI areas, and through the hole to become the output. The intensity is
now four times greater than it was with only one switched-on beam. How
can that be?
Say that in a certain time, 200 photons enter from one beam, and if the
second beam is on, 200 photons from it. With only one constant bias beam
on, the first 200 photons are spread over the entire surface of the mask. If
the hole in the mask is over only the CI area, half of the light will go
through the hole, and half of it will be stopped or diverted by the mask. So
the output through the hole will be just 100 photons.
When the second beam comes on, the interference focuses all of the light into
the CI areas. So that, along with the original 100 photons coming through
the hole, the other 100 of the bias beam are shoved over into the CI area, and
through the hole. At the same time, the second 200 from the other beam are
also focused out through the hole, so the total output is 400 photons.
Because the constant bias beam carries no information, the modulated signal
output is greater than it was in the beginning. By using additional photonic
transistors or by phasing pulses to change the fringe position, combination
photonic transistors can be constructed that, when both inputs are on, remove
the constant 100 photon carrier from the output while not harming the 400.
Therefore, the photonic transistor is an amplifier like its electronic cousin.
Granted, the gain is small. But that this gain exists even in these primitive
examples is what is important. By using optical systems that change the
shape of the fringes, and the proportion of DI area to Ci area, the actual gain
may be tuned for optimum performance. Then, a number of photonic
transistors can be cascaded together to produce appreciable gain.
Please note this is signal and is not light, the type that takes place in lasers.
That is a different process, for a different purpose.
A CI device and a DI device can be made from the same mask simply by
adjusting the position of the fringe. The fringe position can be shifted by a
slight phase change in one of the beams. This adjustment also makes the
photonic transistor into a demodulator for phase-modulated signals, because
the resulting output is amplitude modulated.
The switching speed of a particular photonic transistor is the time it takes
light to travel from the beam-combining optics to the mask. The closer they
are together, the faster the transistor. Anything smaller than about an inch is
faster than the fastest electronic transistor. So imagine what kind of speed is
possible with microscopic components.
In production, photonic transistors can be made very small--near the size of
the wavelength of light being used. The higher the frequency, the shorter the
wavelength. The shorter the wavelength, the smaller and more closely they
can be packed together, and the faster the computer.
Photonic transistors are so general in their nature that predicting which
products will be developed first is difficult. As with electronic transistors,
they are applicable to just about everything. The first products will be
software for the production of photonic transistor photographs and
interconnecting holograms, demonstration products, and individually
connected photonic transistors. These are expected very soon, as we arrange
R&D with the variety of interested groups both large and small. The next
products are expected to be specialized devices, such as telephone fiberoptic
switching systems, and add-on products for speeding up electronic
processing. Then of course, fully photonic teraFLOPS computers as the
photonic-transistor-producing software becomes operational.
Will there be problems in the coming photonic development? Certainly,
there will always be challenges. However, those difficulties will not arise
from any need to research and create specialized materials as with other
optical methods or to figure out some unknown quirk of physics. Rather,
they are merely the geometric problems of engineering the organizational and
architectural arrangement of components, using optical laws that are well
understood.
There is another important reason why photonic development will be much
more rapid than was the development of its electronic counterpart. Although,
the photonic transistor stands today where the electronic transistor stood 40
years ago, the great body of computer science was in its infancy. Modern-day
manufacturing technology didn't exist. The pictures that were used to
fabricate the first computer chips were drawn by hand. The entire ordeal was
time consuming. Early electronic transistors had to be individually wired in
by hand. Printed circuits didn't exist.
Today, the art of holography is well understood and is used to interconnect
digital light beams. Like other photographs, holograms and the photographic
masks that make up photonic computers, can be produced by computer,
calculated into existence from the basic math they are derived from. The
well-known laws of optics, existing equipment, hologram-producing
programs already available, and the principles of the photonic transistor are
the ingredients for the development time acceleration of photonic computers.
Today's tools are much faster than those of yesteryear. Computer aided
design compresses years of development time into months or even hours.
The great body of computer science is mature and well adapted for each new
computer upgrade and is poised for the photonic conversion, which will just
be the next, upgrade.
Remember what happened to the slide rule?
The End
John Hait is an electronics engineer with 35 years of experience in basic
circuit design
and troubleshooting electronic and data processing systems. He
is best known by his books and articles on practical applications of
thermodynamics and electrochemistry. He is the inventor of the photonic
transistor, which is only one of 85 inventions that span the wide spectrum of
practical physics.
Copyright Circuit Cellar INK, The Computer applications
Journal Reprinted by permission.
WHAT'S THE PROBLEM WITH
ELECTRONS?
MASSIVE PARALLEL
ARCHITECTURES
The current trend in computing is to create "parallel architectures." In this
practice, several thousand processors are wired together in order to complete
an overall task in a shorter amount of time. When you read this page, you
read the words in serial, one right after the other. However an image carried
to your eye arrives in a massive parallel fashion. The entire image is there at
the same time.
WHAT PHOTONIC TRANSISTORS ARE
MADE OF
HOW PHOTONIC TRANSISTORS WORK
So how can pictures be made to do the same calculating tasks now done by
complex layers of silicon?
THE LIGHT AT THE END OF THE
TUNNEL
Figure 1--The double light beam interference
fringe and the single beam output that produces no fringe display the wave nature of light used
to produce transistor-like functions in the photonic transistor
Figure 2--The three combinations of two input
beams produce:(1) Both inputs off, no light output; (2) One beam on, even light distribution
through the area; (3) Both beams on, light concentrated into the smaller areas of an interference
fringe. By separating the fringe component regions into destructive interference (DI) areas and
constructive interference (CI) areas, the photonic transistor is able to produce the Boolean OR
and XOR functions, signal amplification, and analog signal processing.
A PHOTONIC OR
In an actual photonic transistor the entire fringe may be used. However, to
understand how they work, let me zoom in on the small circles located in the
CI and DI areas. Take a piece of cardboard or paper a couple of inches
square, and punch a hole in the middle of it. That piece of paper represents
a photonic transistor. Figure 2 represents the input to the transistor in its
various states. Your eye is the detector for viewing the output.
A PHOTONIC XOR
However, two are required to tango, and two Boolean functions are needed in
order to produce the others (and all of computing). So take your paper
photonic transistor and place it over the area marked "D". This is a new
position is relative to the fringe that will be used to preform the XOR
function. In this state, both beams are off--so no output. Move it down to
"E," which represents the same position as D in the first state, and again,
only one beam is on, so there is output.
OTHER FUNCTIONS
As with all XOR gates, if one beam is kept on all the time using a DI-
positioned mask, and the second beam is alternately turned on and off, the
output is switched off and on, you're switching off and on the output--that is,
then the modulated input beam is on, the output is off, and vice versa.
Therefore, it is a photonic inverter, or the equivalent of a NOT circuit.
Figure 3-- Photonic transistor demonstration using a Michelson
Interferometer with a fring component separating mask placed between the beam combining
optics and the viewing screen.
A SIMPLE DEMONSTRATION
Placed between the beam-combining optics and the display screen of a
Michelson Interferometer, as in Figure 3, the mask in your hand can be made
to actually function as the world's fastest transistor. The Michelson
Interferometer breaks the source laser beam into two and recombines them
again in the output. By blocking the light at the two side paths of the
interferometer, as needed, the two input beams may be turn on and off in
order to demonstrate all the input and corresponding output states of this
macroscopic photonic transistor.
DEVELOPMENT
Will you be able to buy a desk-top photonic supercomputer next week?
Maybe not that quickly, but soon. While development will take some time, I
estimate that the first photonic hardware may be replacing some electronic
computers within five years, and accelerate from there.
Home | Frequenty Asked Questions | Photonics Menu