[img_assist|nid=183|title=First image stored and retrieved from a single photon (Credit University of Rochester)|desc=|link=popup|align=right|width=100|height=31]
Scientists encoded an entire image's worth of data into a single photon, slowed the image down for storage, and then retrieved the image intact, marking a major breakthrough in optics[ UR].
According to the University of Rochester team, while the initial test image consists of only a few hundred pixels, a tremendous amount of information can be stored with the new technique which opens the door to “optical buffering”, the process of storing information as light.
The image, a "UR" for the University of Rochester, was made using a single pulse of light and the team can fit as many as a hundred of these pulses at once into a tiny, four-inch cell.
"It sort of sounds impossible, but instead of storing just ones and zeros, we're storing an entire image," John Howell, associate professor of physics and leader of the team that created the device, which is revealed in today's online issue of the journal Physical Review Letters said. "It's analogous to the difference between snapping a picture with a single pixel and doing it with a camera—this is like a 6-megapixel camera."
"You can have a tremendous amount of information in a pulse of light, but normally if you try to buffer it, you can lose much of that information," Ryan Camacho, Howell's graduate student and lead author on the article, said. "We're showing it's possible to pull out an enormous amount of information with an extremely high signal-to-noise ratio even with very low light levels."
Optical buffering is a particularly hot field right now because engineers are trying to speed up computer processing and network speeds using light, but their systems bog down when they have to convert light signals to electronic signals to store information, even for a short while.
Howell's group used a completely new approach that preserves all the properties of the pulse.
The buffered pulse is essentially a perfect original; there is almost no distortion, no additional diffraction, and the phase and amplitude of the original signal are all preserved. Howell is even working to demonstrate that quantum entanglement remains unscathed.
To produce the UR image, Howell simply shone a beam of light through a stencil with the U and R etched out.
Anyone who has made shadow puppets knows how this works, but Howell turned down the light so much that a single photon was all that passed through the stencil.
Quantum mechanics dictates some strange things at that scale, so that bit of light could be thought of as both a particle and a wave.
As a wave, it passed through all parts of the stencil at once, carrying the "shadow" of the UR with it.
The pulse of light then entered a four-inch cell of cesium gas at a warm 100 degrees Celsius, where it was slowed and compressed, allowing many pulses to fit inside the small tube at the same time.
"The parallel amount of information John has sent all at once in an image is enormous in comparison to what anyone else has done before," Alan Willner, professor of electrical engineering at the University of Southern California and president of the IEEE Lasers and Optical Society, said. "To do that and be able to maintain the integrity of the signal—it's a wonderful achievement."
Howell has so far been able to delay light pulses 100 nanoseconds and compress them to 1 percent of their original length.
He is now working toward delaying dozens of pulses for as long as several milliseconds, and as many as 10,000 pulses for up to a nanosecond.
"Now I want to see if we can delay something almost permanently, even at the single photon level," Howell remarked. "If we can do that, we're looking at storing incredible amounts of information in just a few photons."

Interesting Story.
Interesting Story.
(No subject)
Confusion
This artcicle never finishes describing the process by explaining how the information was retrieved. It suggest to me that, as is the case in far too much science reporting, the writer doesn't fully understand what they are writing about.
Needs more explaining. Seems
Needs more explaining.
Seems like they are storing 100KB of data on a single bit(??) Sounds weird.
Terrific....
I had some previous experience in holographic data storage, but compression of entire image as form of image (not bits) is really a terrific thing.
best luck with your research.
Cheers,
Usman Ahmad
Bogus
This has got to be bogus. Or Fake. It is incomplete, meaning key facts are left out which means in the end, that nothing of any substance is really occuring.
holography
Fluff piece, I'd like to know more.
I've only got a rudimentary understanding of the effects of laser light via some hands on experience with holography. This seems like a similar concept in that all measurements and calculations we took/made were for the theoretical "single" photon exiting the laser... theoretically we could have also reduced our laser output to a single photon and the interference would still create a usable hologram.
Of course that was a long time ago and I had no real understanding of quantum effects and such.
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