U of A Engineering professor Zubin Jacob wants to refine the optical transmission of information by using a single photon, to allow unprecedented applications in optical information transfer. (Credit: Image courtesy of University of Alberta) |
A research team at the University of Alberta wants to refine the
optical transmission of information by using a single photon, the
fundamental building block of light that can allow unprecedented
applications in optical information transfer.
Zubin Jacob, a U of A electrical and computer engineering researcher,
says that rather than spreading data over waves of light, the goal is
to use single particles of light, photons.
"Unfortunately, the efficient generation of single photons for
practical applications is a serious engineering challenge," said Jacob.
Jacob and his research team are looking into metamaterials to tackle
this problem. A metamaterial is a medium that has designer
nanostructures in it, giving it technical capabilities beyond any
materials we currently have. "The metamaterial would efficiently collect
single photons of light and allow their transmission," said Jacob.
At other universities, researchers are looking at attaching single
photons to waves of electrons. The electrons and photons combine to form
a plasmon wave that can be transmitted on a metal nanowire.
Jacob says the benefit of working with single photons for
transmitting computer data is the ability to encode much more complex
information on an individual particle of light. "A single photon could
carry encryption codes, which are far more complex than the security
password information we currently use to protect sensitive data."
Jacob says that this technology is at least 10 years away and the
products are not aimed at general consumers. "This technology is
destined for markets such as the military that requires extremely high
levels of data encryption."
The development in this field of research combining nanophotonics and quantum technologies was published Oct. 27 in the journal Science.
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