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by staunton
1240 days ago
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> For physics reasons the integration density of optical compute elements is abysmal and will remain so forever. Could you give some details? Claims about "forever" often don't hold up. I guess you're referring to things like component size in relation to the wavelength of light used? One could use smaller wavelengths. Integrated photonics is certainly being done and also commercially relevant (in telecommunications). What integration density would you consider not-abysmal? How much does integration density matter if you have very low loss (which means low power dissipation, a huge problem for semiconductor electronics) and can just make big chips? There is also research arguing that optoelectronics might eventually be very useful for computing, e.g. recently [1]. (Yes, this is by researchers who need to appear relevant. However, if we dismiss their arguments based on that alone, we can abolish all research altogether.) Why do you disagree? Again, you were talking about forever. [1]: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-022-29252-1 |
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The same issues that affect electronic VLSI manufacturing also apply to trying to use light on-chip. The semiconductor industry had to transition to EUV (13.5nm) light to make it work. But that has huge and inefficient light sources.
Photonics makes sense if one end of your system has light on it; if you're building a LIDAR system, or data transmission over fiber, or somesuch. I have not yet seen anyone doing computation at scale in light.