Twisted Radio Beams Could Untangle the Airwaves
Urchin writes "The radio frequency spectrum available for wireless communication is becoming increasingly crowded thanks to new wireless technology. A solution to the shrinking space might be to put a spin on radio beams during their transmission, to produce a twisted beam, according to Swedish physicists. In theory, huge amounts of data could be sent in the pitch of the twist, which is distinct from the amplitude and frequency of radio waves — the features used at the moment to send information."
The article suggests the technique only works really for point-to-point transmission. Regular amplitude/phase modulation (QAM) is still the best generally I'd imagine.
You are aware that digital radio techniques all use amplitude, frequency or phase modulation, right? The difference is that the modulation is digital (or thereabouts) rather than analog.
Yes, you are, and no, they aren't.
This is about modulating the orbital angular momentum of photons, a property that wasn't even discovered until 1992.
Each photon can have an integer quantity of orbital angular momentum (0, 1, 2, 3...) without obvious limit (or in the opposite direction, -1, -2, -3...). In principle, and increasingly in experiment, it is possible to encode information by modulating the orbital angular momentum carried. This provides and entirely separate channel with its own bandwidth in addition to traditionally understood modulation. They're right to be excited about it; it has the potential of being just as big in scope as was the invention of radio.
See http://www.physics.gla.ac.uk/Optics/play/photonOAM/
Professional Wild-Eyed Visionary
This is about modulating the orbital angular momentum of photons, a property that wasn't even discovered until 1992.
Each photon can have an integer quantity of orbital angular momentum (0, 1, 2, 3...) without obvious limit (or in the opposite direction, -1, -2, -3...). In principle, and increasingly in experiment, it is possible to encode information by modulating the orbital angular momentum carried. This provides and entirely separate channel with its own bandwidth in addition to traditionally understood modulation. They're right to be excited about it; it has the potential of being just as big in scope as was the invention of radio.
See http://www.physics.gla.ac.uk/Optics/play/photonOAM/
Professional Wild-Eyed Visionary
They're using physics that wasn't even discovered until 1992.
See http://www.physics.gla.ac.uk/Optics/play/photonOAM/
Professional Wild-Eyed Visionary
This is slightly different than simple polarization, see here: http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg18224515.000 -- full article requires log-in. Or here: http://www.physics.gla.ac.uk/Optics/play/photonOAM/ The point here is that a "pulse" can now encode more than just an "on/off" state. Instead, a pulse now encodes a "twistiness" level of states (can be 1, 2, 3, or up to 250 as in the NS article.) So, a 2GHz signal can now carries, let's say, 2x8 = 16 Gb/s. The trouble, it seems, is to construct a receiver capable of correctly identifying the pulses.