Synthetic Magnetic Fields Steer Light On a Chip For Faster Communications (phys.org)
- Reference: 0179195194
- News link: https://science.slashdot.org/story/25/09/12/2344232/synthetic-magnetic-fields-steer-light-on-a-chip-for-faster-communications
- Source link: https://phys.org/news/2025-09-synthetic-magnetic-fields-chip-faster.html
> The team achieved this by systematically altering the symmetry of tiny repeating units in silicon photonic crystals. Adjusting the degree of local asymmetry at each point allowed them to 'design' pseudomagnetic fields with tailored spatial patterns, without breaking fundamental time-reversal symmetry. Both theoretical analysis and experiments confirmed that these engineered fields can guide and manipulate light in versatile ways. To demonstrate practical applications, the researchers built two devices commonly used in integrated optics. One was a compact S-shaped waveguide bend that transmitted light with less than 1.83 decibels of signal loss. The other was a power splitter that divided light into two equal paths with low excess loss and minimal imbalance. In a final test, the devices successfully transmitted a high-speed data stream at 140 gigabits per second using a standard telecommunications modulation format, showing that the technique is compatible with existing optical communication systems.
The research has been [3]published in Advanced Photonics .
[1] https://phys.org/news/2025-09-synthetic-magnetic-fields-chip-faster.html
[2] https://slashdot.org/~alternative_right
[3] https://www.spiedigitallibrary.org/journals/advanced-photonics/volume-7/issue-06/066001/Arbitrary-control-of-the-flow-of-light-using-pseudomagnetic-fields/10.1117/1.AP.7.6.066001.full
huh? (Score:2)
I thought only gravity affects light? You need a charged particle for magnetics to be effective don't you?
Re: huh? (Score:1)
Yeah, my thoughts initially, but photons do interact with strong magnetic fields. Normally the fields in photonic crystals are too small to have any effect, but they're using sophisticated control of the semiconductor lattice to introduce strain which results in a pseudomagnetic field strong enough to have effects. It's pretty amazing stuff. They built two devices; an s shaped waveguide and a beam splitter to demonstrate real world capabilities. Wonder how easy it'll be to transfer precision lab enginee