July 2000
The Microphotonics Revolution
Get ready for optical switching in the telecommunications network backbone, then an all-optical Internet, and finally optical integrated circuits. The amount of data we can get almost anywhere will skyrocket.
By Peter Fairley
At first glance, it's an unremarkable gadget. About the size of a nickel, the device is made using standard technology borrowed from inkjet printers that squirts tiny bubbles at the intersection of channels carved in a slice of glass. But this seemingly mundane piece of optical equipment performs one of today's most sought-after technology tricks. As light from an optical fiber shines onto it, the light is guided down one of the channels and, at the intersection, a bubble deflects the light beam, deftly rerouting it to just the right outgoing fiber. This "optical switch" is orders of magnitude smaller than anything now on the market and vastly outperforms existing devices, orchestrating 32 beams of light in less than one-hundredth of a second.
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