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Handling light with a pair of tweezers


Handling light with a pair of tweezers: a possible break-through for telecommunications

Researchers at the University of Auckland have demonstrated “temporal tweezing of light” for the first time, a break-through that may play a crucial role in the way data is processed over the internet in the future.

Researchers at the University of Auckland have demonstrated “temporal tweezing of light” for the first time, a break-through that may play a crucial role in the way data is processed over the internet in the future.

The Laser Physics Research Group at the University of Auckland, including Dr Stuart Murdoch, Associate Professor Stéphane Coen, Dr Miro Erkintalo and PhD student Jae Jang, are behind the research which is published today in Nature Communications.

Everyday mechanical tweezers move objects around in space and come in handy whenever we need to manipulate something too tiny for our fingers. Light cannot be held with fingers, but “temporal light tweezers” – which are made of laser light themselves – are able to do something similar: they allow the time separation between separate pulses of light to be changed.

The technique works on pulses of light travelling in a loop of fibre optical cable - the same cable used to bring broadband to homes. These pulses of light are separated in time, one trailing the other.

Temporal light tweezers are able to speed up or slow down individual light pulses and so change their temporal separation – for example an initial separation of one hundred picosecond (one hundred millionth of a millionth of a second) can be changed to fifty picosecond.

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This is the first time arbitrary modification of the spacing between two light pulses travelling in a fibre loop has been achieved. The Auckland team was able to independently manipulate several pulses at once.

“We are pretty excited about these results and the huge range of possible applications the technique might have, especially in the context of next-generation optical communications,” Dr Erkintalo says.

“Our ability to move pulses around in time means we can reconfigure an optical data signal without the need for power-hungry, electronic conversion, which is what happens now.

“And with the tremendous pace at which the amount of optical data is growing, faster and more energy-efficient data processing will be needed sooner rather than later.”

The work was supported by funding from the Marsden Fund through the Royal Society of New Zealand. The funding was awarded in 2011.

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