Close Menu

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    Galaxy S25 gets a sweet discount on Amazon

    October 31, 2025

    HP Monster Laptop (64 GB RAM, 2 TB SSD) Hits Mid-Range Pricing After Amazon’s Massive $2,300 Price Cut

    October 31, 2025

    Neanderthals used ‘crayons’ to color

    October 31, 2025
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Friday, October 31
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube Mastodon Tumblr Bluesky LinkedIn Threads
    ToolcomeToolcome
    • Technology & Startups

      If You Hated ‘A House of Dynamite,’ Watch This Classic Nuclear Thriller Instead

      October 31, 2025

      Giant Home Depot Skeletons Are on Crazy Sale Right Now (2025)

      October 30, 2025

      No, SNAP Benefits Aren’t Mostly Used by Immigrants

      October 30, 2025

      WIRED Roundup: AI Psychosis, Missing FTC Files, and Google Bedbugs

      October 30, 2025

      The 35 Best Movies on HBO Max Right Now (November 2025)

      October 30, 2025
    • Science & Education

      Neanderthals used ‘crayons’ to color

      October 31, 2025

      18th century lead ammo found in Scottish Highlands

      October 31, 2025

      2,200-year-old Celtic ‘rainbow cup’ in ‘almost mint condition’ found in Germany

      October 30, 2025

      ‘One of our most exciting discoveries so far’: Physicists detect rare ‘second-generation’ black holes that prove Einstein right again

      October 30, 2025

      Greenland is twisting, tensing and shrinking due to the ‘ghosts’ of melted ice sheets

      October 30, 2025
    • Mobile Phones

      Galaxy S25 gets a sweet discount on Amazon

      October 31, 2025

      You won’t believe which device is getting WhatsApp next

      October 31, 2025

      Samsung beats Apple again, but you wouldn’t guess the fastest-growing smartphone brand in the world

      October 30, 2025

      Your Android always-on display might be about to get a massive upgrade

      October 30, 2025

      Hidden in its Q3 report was news that could lead to big problems at AT&T

      October 30, 2025
    • Gadgets

      Fractal Design Scape review: A stellar debut

      October 31, 2025

      Paramount’s Call of Duty movie taps the writers of Yellowstone and Friday Night Lights

      October 30, 2025

      OpenAI now sells extra Sora credits for $4, plans to reduce free gens in the future

      October 30, 2025

      Oakley Meta Vanguard review: Sporty to a fault

      October 30, 2025

      Affinity resurfaces as an all-in-one illustration, photo editing and layout app

      October 30, 2025
    • Gaming

      HP Monster Laptop (64 GB RAM, 2 TB SSD) Hits Mid-Range Pricing After Amazon’s Massive $2,300 Price Cut

      October 31, 2025

      If You Own an iPhone, This DJI Gimbal Stabilizer Costs Pennies and Films Like Hollywood

      October 31, 2025

      Dell Quietly Offloads 1TB 16-Inch Laptops, Now Nearly Free at 71% Off on Amazon

      October 30, 2025

      Arc Raiders Joins Battlefield 6 In The War Against Goofy Skins

      October 30, 2025

      17 Excellent Games To Play This Halloween

      October 30, 2025
    ToolcomeToolcome
    Home»Science & Education»‘Rainbow-on-a-chip’ could help keep AI energy demands in check — and it was created by accident
    Science & Education

    ‘Rainbow-on-a-chip’ could help keep AI energy demands in check — and it was created by accident

    October 24, 2025No Comments4 Mins Read0 Views
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Telegram Tumblr Email
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email



    A lab accident has led engineers to build a chip that fires a rainbow of powerful laser beams — and it could help data centers better manage skyrocketing volumes of artificial intelligence (AI) data.

    The new photonics chip contains an industrial-grade laser source paired with a precisely engineered optical circuit that shapes and stabilizes the light before splitting it into multiple, evenly spaced colors.

    Because each color band represents an optical frequency that can carry its own unique stream of data, the technology could enable data centers to move information around far faster and more efficiently than existing optical networks such as fiber, which transmit data using single-wavelength laser pulses.


    You may like

    Creating this rainbow effect — called a frequency comb — typically requires large and expensive lasers and amplifiers. However, the researchers stumbled on a way to pack this powerful photonics technology into a single, tiny chip when working on a way to improve lidar (light detection and ranging) technology.

    Lidar uses laser pulses to measure distance based on the time it takes them to travel to an object and bounce back. While trying to produce more powerful lasers capable of capturing detailed data from further away, the team noticed the chip was splitting the light into multiple colors.

    What is a frequency comb?

    A frequency comb is a type of laser light made up of multiple colors or frequencies that are evenly spaced across the optical spectrum. When plotted on a spectrogram, these frequencies appear as spikes resembling the teeth of a comb.

    The peak of each “tooth” represents a stable, precisely defined wavelength that can carry information independently of the others. Because the wavelengths are locked in both frequency and phase — meaning their peaks stay perfectly aligned — they don’t interfere with one another. This enables multiple data streams to travel in parallel through a single optical channel, such as a fiber-optic cable.

    Get the world’s most fascinating discoveries delivered straight to your inbox.

    After stumbling on the effect by accident, the scientists then engineered a way to reproduce it intentionally and controllably. They also packed the technology into a silicon chip where light travels through waveguides mere micrometers wide; one micrometer (1 µm) is one-thousandth of a millimeter (0.0001 cm), or roughly one-hundredth the width of a human hair.

    The team published their findings Oct. 7 in the journal Nature Photonics. The breakthrough is especially important now that AI is placing more and more resource strain on data center infrastructure, the researchers said.

    “Data centers have created tremendous demand for powerful and efficient sources of light that contain many wavelengths,” study co-author Andres Gil-Molina, principal engineer at Xscape Photonics and a former researcher at Columbia Engineering, said in a statement.


    You may like

    “The technology we’ve developed takes a very powerful laser and turns it into dozens of clean, high-power channels on a chip. That means you can replace racks of individual lasers with one compact device, cutting cost, saving space and opening the door to much faster, more energy-efficient systems.”

    Rainbow-on-a-chip

    To create a frequency comb on a chip, the researchers needed to find a high-power laser that could be squeezed into a compact photonic circuit. They eventually settled on a multimode laser diode, which is widely used in medical devices and laser cutting tools.

    Multimode laser diodes can produce powerful beams of laser light, but the beam is “messy,” meaning the researchers needed to figure out how to refine and stabilize the light to make it workable, the researchers said in the study.

    They achieved this using a technique called self-injection locking, which involves integrating resonators into the chip that feed a small portion of the light back into the laser. This filters and stabilizes the light, resulting in a beam that’s both powerful and highly stable.

    Once stabilized, the chip splits the laser beam into a multicolored frequency comb. The result is a small but efficient photonics device that combines the power of an industrial laser with the precision needed for data transmission and sensing applications, the scientists added.

    Beyond data centers, the new chip could enable portable spectrometers, ultra-precise optical clocks, compact quantum devices and even advanced lidar systems.

    “This is about bringing lab-grade light sources into real-world devices,” said Gil-Molina. “If you can make them powerful, efficient and small enough, you can put them almost anywhere.”



    Source link

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    mehedihasan9992
    • Website

    Related Posts

    Neanderthals used ‘crayons’ to color

    October 31, 2025

    18th century lead ammo found in Scottish Highlands

    October 31, 2025

    2,200-year-old Celtic ‘rainbow cup’ in ‘almost mint condition’ found in Germany

    October 30, 2025

    ‘One of our most exciting discoveries so far’: Physicists detect rare ‘second-generation’ black holes that prove Einstein right again

    October 30, 2025

    Greenland is twisting, tensing and shrinking due to the ‘ghosts’ of melted ice sheets

    October 30, 2025

    Astronomers discover surprisingly lopsided disk around a nearby star using groundbreaking telescope upgrade

    October 30, 2025
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Top Posts

    Lab monkeys on the loose in Mississippi don’t have herpes, university says. But are they dangerous?

    October 30, 202510 Views

    OnlyFans Goes to Business School

    October 29, 20257 Views

    How to watch the 2025 MLB World Series without cable

    October 30, 20256 Views
    Don't Miss

    Galaxy S25 gets a sweet discount on Amazon

    October 31, 2025

    The regular Galaxy S25 is currently a hot choice, whether you’re a Galaxy fan or…

    HP Monster Laptop (64 GB RAM, 2 TB SSD) Hits Mid-Range Pricing After Amazon’s Massive $2,300 Price Cut

    October 31, 2025

    Neanderthals used ‘crayons’ to color

    October 31, 2025

    If You Hated ‘A House of Dynamite,’ Watch This Classic Nuclear Thriller Instead

    October 31, 2025
    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • YouTube
    • TikTok
    • WhatsApp
    • Twitter
    • Instagram
    Latest Reviews
    8.9

    Review: Dell’s New Tablet PC Can Survive -20f And Drops

    January 15, 2021

    Review: Kia EV6 2022 The Best Electric Vehicle Ever?

    January 14, 2021
    72

    Review: Animation Software Business Share, Market Size and Growth

    January 14, 2021
    Most Popular

    Lab monkeys on the loose in Mississippi don’t have herpes, university says. But are they dangerous?

    October 30, 202510 Views

    OnlyFans Goes to Business School

    October 29, 20257 Views

    How to watch the 2025 MLB World Series without cable

    October 30, 20256 Views
    Our Picks

    Galaxy S25 gets a sweet discount on Amazon

    October 31, 2025

    HP Monster Laptop (64 GB RAM, 2 TB SSD) Hits Mid-Range Pricing After Amazon’s Massive $2,300 Price Cut

    October 31, 2025

    Neanderthals used ‘crayons’ to color

    October 31, 2025

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    Toolcome
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube
    • Home
    • Technology
    • Gaming
    • Mobile Phones
    © 2025 Tolcome. Designed by Aim Digi Ltd.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.