Light solution
IBM says it has made a breakthrough in converting electrical signals into light pulses that brings closer the day when supercomputing, which now requires huge machines, will be done on a single chip. In research published in the journal Optics Express, IBM said it had reached a milestone in the quest to connect hundreds or thousands of processing cores on a tiny chip by eliminating the wires required to connect them.
The semiconductor industry is evolving multi-core chips that take up less space than multiple single-core chips but they are extremely power-hungry and produce large amounts of heat, factors that are holding back improvements in computing power. IBM's Cell processor which powers the Sony PlayStation 3 is one of the most advanced chips in the market today that combines nine cores. Using light instead of wires to send information between the cores by using a silicon Mach-Zehnder electro-optic modulator can be as much as 100 times faster and use 10 times less power than wires, says IBM.
The new modulator IBM has developed is 100 to 1,000 times smaller than previously demonstrated comparable modulators, paving the way for significant reductions in cost, energy and heat while increasing bandwidth. |