jueves, 21 de mayo de 2020

Corkscrew light promises higher optical-communication data rates | Ars Technica

Corkscrew light promises higher optical-communication data rates | Ars Technica

Twisted pulses of light swirl like a corkscrew.

(Judy Gallagher/Flickr (CC BY 2.0))



Twisted light steps closer to the Internet

Researchers have demonstrated that a photonic device can produce twisted pulses of light, meaning that their electromagnetic waves swirl in a vortex. The ring-shaped, microscopic ‘tunable vortex microlaser’ is a step towards faster optical communications. Contrary to the properties of light that are commonly used to encode information — wave phase and amplitude — vortices come in discrete types. This makes it harder to mistake one phase for another, which could help to increase the capacity of optical fibres.
Ars Technica | 6 min readSource: Science paper

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