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      Why I am optimistic about the silicon-photonic route to quantum computing

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      APL Photonics
      AIP Publishing

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          The operated Markov´s chains in economy (discrete chains of Markov with the income)

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            Universal quantum computation with ideal Clifford gates and noisy ancillas

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              Single-chip microprocessor that communicates directly using light.

              Data transport across short electrical wires is limited by both bandwidth and power density, which creates a performance bottleneck for semiconductor microchips in modern computer systems--from mobile phones to large-scale data centres. These limitations can be overcome by using optical communications based on chip-scale electronic-photonic systems enabled by silicon-based nanophotonic devices. However, combining electronics and photonics on the same chip has proved challenging, owing to microchip manufacturing conflicts between electronics and photonics. Consequently, current electronic-photonic chips are limited to niche manufacturing processes and include only a few optical devices alongside simple circuits. Here we report an electronic-photonic system on a single chip integrating over 70 million transistors and 850 photonic components that work together to provide logic, memory, and interconnect functions. This system is a realization of a microprocessor that uses on-chip photonic devices to directly communicate with other chips using light. To integrate electronics and photonics at the scale of a microprocessor chip, we adopt a 'zero-change' approach to the integration of photonics. Instead of developing a custom process to enable the fabrication of photonics, which would complicate or eliminate the possibility of integration with state-of-the-art transistors at large scale and at high yield, we design optical devices using a standard microelectronics foundry process that is used for modern microprocessors. This demonstration could represent the beginning of an era of chip-scale electronic-photonic systems with the potential to transform computing system architectures, enabling more powerful computers, from network infrastructure to data centres and supercomputers.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                APL Photonics
                APL Photonics
                AIP Publishing
                2378-0967
                March 2017
                March 2017
                : 2
                : 3
                : 030901
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Department of Physics, Imperial College London, London SW7 2AZ, United Kingdom
                Article
                10.1063/1.4976737
                956f54fa-4656-4963-8cd5-c2f575cd139b
                © 2017
                History

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