Skip to main content

New computer chips do math with light

It’s a bright day for computing — literally.

Two tech companies have unveiled computer components that use laser light to process information. These futuristic processors could soon solve specific real-world problems faster and with lower energy requirements than conventional computers. The announcements, published separately April 9 in Nature, mark a major leap forward for this alternative approach to computing.

Lightelligence, based in Boston, and Lightmatter, in Mountain View, Calif., have shown that light-based, or photonic, components “can do things that we care about, and that they can do them better than electronic chips that we already have,” says Anthony Rizzo, a photonics engineer at Dartmouth College who was not involved in either study.

Lasers already zap data across the world via fiber optic cables, and photonics plays a role in moving data in advanced data centers. In March, for example, tech company NVIDIA, based in Santa Clara, Calif., announced new technology that uses light to communicate between devices. But, Rizzo says, these light beams don’t compute anything. Inside a conventional computer, incoming light signals are transformed into slower electronic 1s and 0s that move through tiny transistors.

In contrast, light inside the Lightmatter and Lightelligence devices “is actually doing math,” Rizzo says. Specifically, both use light to perform matrix multiplication, a fundamental operation in most AI processing as well as other areas of computing. In both new devices, all other calculations occur in electronic components.

The timing of these new developments is crucial. AI models are growing in size and complexity, while the progress of traditional chips is slowing. Historically, the number of transistors that engineers could squeeze onto chips would roughly double every two years, a trend known as Moore’s law. Tinier transistors meant faster, cheaper computing.

But Moore’s law has reached its limit, says Nick Harris, founder and CEO of Lightmatter. Other experts agree. The physics of how electricity moves through transistors prevents them from shrinking much further. Computers based on regular electronic chips “are not going to be getting better,” Harris says. Photonic computing offers a potential solution.

A silver-colored computer component with four clear colored cables attached to it.
Inside this device made by Lightmatter, which is about as wide as a computer keyboard, four photonic chips do math with light. Over 200,000 components manipulate 512 light beams to perform matrix multiplication with greater speed and efficiency than a typical electronic chip.Lightmatter

The Lightelligence device, named PACE, combines a photonic and electronic chip to speed up computation for optimization problems, which are crucial for industries such as finance, manufacturing and shipping. The Lightmatter device, on the other hand, is a more general-purpose processor that integrates four light-based and two electronic chips. The team used this system to run mainstream AI technology, including large language models like those behind ChatGPT or Claude. They also ran a deep learning algorithm that practiced playing Atari games, including Pac-Man.

“That’s never been done” using any sort of alternative computer processing technology, Harris says. Engineers had previously built experimental photonic processors that could do math, but these never came close to matching a regular computer’s performance on real-world computing problems.

One big problem with experimental photonic processors has been accuracy. Light signals can take on a vast range of values instead of representing just 1 and 0. If one of these values isn’t transmitted correctly, a tiny mistake could compound into a big error in calculations.

In the optimization problems Lightelligence tested, some randomness can be a good thing. It helps the system explore solutions more efficiently, the company said in a statement. Lightmatter addresses this issue by stacking electronic chips atop its photonic ones to carefully control the incoming and outgoing data, thus reducing errors.

Their new processor “is not a lab prototype,” Harris says. “This is a new type of computer. And it’s here.”

The photonic components for both devices can be manufactured using the same factories and processes that already produce electronic chips, Rizzo says. So the technology will scale easily. “These could be in real systems very soon,” he says, adding that the technologies could show up in data centers within five years.

https://worldnewsguru.us/?p=27297&network_id=

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Dollar set for best week since November on US rates, economic outlook

By Rae Wee SINGAPORE () -The dollar was on track for its best weekly performance in over a month on Friday, underpinned by expectations of fewer Federal Reserve rate cuts this year and the view that the U.S. economy will continue to outperform the rest of its peers globally. The greenback began the new year on a strong note reaching a more than two-year high of 109.54 against a basket of currencies on Thursday as it extended a stellar rally from last year. Its charge higher has come on the back of a more hawkish Fed and a resilient U.S. economy. "Looks like dollar strength is here to stay for now in early 2025 given the U.S. exceptionalism story is here to stay, and it still comes with high U.S. yields," said Charu Chanana, chief investment strategist at Saxo. "Add to that the uncertainty from policies of the incoming (Donald) Trump administration, and you also get the safety aspect of the dollar looking attractive." Ahead of U.S. President-elect Trump'...

California's latest job-killing policy is more bad news for Golden Staters

California's latest job-killing policy is more bad news for Golden Staters California’s list of public policy failures was already long, but hiking its minimum wage to $20 an hour for fast-food workers may belong at the top. The predictable fallout in lost jobs and higher pr... Read more: https://worldnewsguru.us/business-news/californias-latest-jobkilling-policyis-more-bad-news-for-golden-staters Originally published on World News Guru

Trump push to use tariffs to pay for tax cuts faces opposition in Congress

By Jarrett Renshaw, David Morgan and David Lawder WASHINGTON () - U.S. President Donald Trump is pushing a plan to explicitly use revenue from higher tariffs on imported goods to help pay for extending trillions of dollars in tax cuts, an unprecedented shift likely to face opposition from many of his fellow Republicans in Congress. The U.S. collects less than $100 billion annually in trade penalties imposed on imported goods as a tool to protect and grow domestic industries. That money is rarely a topic in Washington's routine budget battles because it makes up so little of the federal government's revenue.  Trump has threatened across-the-board import tariffs, but has yet to impose any. The president and his allies say he wants to use them much like the personal and corporate taxes that account for the vast majority of U.S. revenues, notching up tariffs to help pay for government programs and cover promised tax cuts.  "Instead of taxing our citizens to enrich other...