Technology has immortality, cures for the worlds devastating diseases, quantum computing and a host of other science fiction notions in its grasp. Current trends in a number of areas indicate that over the next 10 years many of these technologies will come to fruition. "The Next 10 Years" tracks the trends that will transform our everyday lives in almost unimaginable ways.

Saturday, January 20, 2007

Ultra-Dense Optical Storage -- on One Photon

Ultra-Dense Optical Storage -- on One Photon: "While the initial test image consists of only a few hundred pixels, a tremendous amount of information can be stored with the new technique.

The image, a 'UR' for the University of Rochester, was made using a single pulse of light and the team can fit as many as a hundred of these pulses at once into a tiny, four-inch cell. Squeezing that much information into so small a space and retrieving it intact opens the door to optical buffering—storing information as light.

'It sort of sounds impossible, but instead of storing just ones and zeros, we're storing an entire image,' says John Howell, associate professor of physics and leader of the team that created the device, which is revealed in today's online issue of the journal Physical Review Letters. 'It's analogous to the difference between snapping a picture with a single pixel and doing it with a camera—this is like a 6-megapixel camera.' "

1 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

This article is obviously wrong. It is not possible to make an image with one photon. Somebody at the Univeristy of Rochester is not watching what their public relations department is writing, but making an entire image with only one photon
is scientific nonsense.

10:26 PM

 

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