Integrated Circuit Amplifier Breaches Terahertz Barrier 81
jenningsthecat writes: DARPA's Terahertz Electronics program has created "the fastest solid-state amplifier integrated circuit ever measured." The Terahertz Monolithic Integrated Circuit (TMIC), boasts a gain of 9dB — previously unheard of for a monolithic device in this frequency range. Plus, the status of "fastest" has been certified by Guinness — seriously! ('Cause you might not trust DARPA, but you gotta trust Guinness — right?).
In related news, DARPA has also created a micro-machined vacuum power amplifier operating at 850 GHz, or 0.85 THz.
In related news, DARPA has also created a micro-machined vacuum power amplifier operating at 850 GHz, or 0.85 THz.
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i miss old slashdot (Score:1)
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I feel for you...
So, imagine a beowulf cluster of these things!
I would imagine that interconnect with these things would be an issue. Usually computation is cheap while bandwidth is expensive, so you might have to use a huge number of extremely small computational cores to get the kind of linear increases in speed we'd expect. That would have to result in a RISC arcitecture, and apparently you can build a more or less complete computational core with just 70 transistors.
Not sure if anyone has ever tried to
And there was a great disturbance in the force (Score:5, Funny)
As if millions of audiophiles cried out in terror and were not heard because their amplifiers didn't have 10db of gain at 1.03 terahertz.
Re:And there was a great disturbance in the force (Score:5, Funny)
uh oh.. zombies (Score:2, Funny)
One day, scientists are going to play the wrong frequency and it is going to re-arrange all our brains.. then.. zombie apocalypse..
However, that can be circumvented if the scientists at one of those large colliders create the wrong matter that turns us all into zombies and starts a different zombie apocalypse..
I had a better story.. but it's Halloween.. go out of your house and look at the women that dress sexy. Happy Halloween!
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One day, scientists are going to play the wrong frequency and it is going to re-arrange all our brains.. then.. zombie apocalypse..
Or discover the feared Brown Note [wikipedia.org]. (Thank you South Park (and MythBusters) for putting that imagery in my head. Some things cannot be unseen.)
Tetrahertz (Score:2, Informative)
From TFA:
The ten-stage common-source amplifier operates at a speed of one terahertz (10^12 GHz)
one tretrahertz is not 10^12 Ghz, it is 10^3 Ghz.
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one tretrahertz is not 10^12 Ghz, it is 10^3 Ghz.
Tretrahertz - the frequency at which trick or treaters visit your house.
Not solid state... (Score:1)
"Researchers under DARPA 's Terahertz Electronics (THz) program have designed and demonstrated a 0.85 Terahertz power amplifier using a micromachined vacuum tube..."
'Solid-state' was the term invented to differentiate vacuum tube technology from semiconductor (solid-state) technology... Summary is not just wrong, it gets it exactly OPPOSITE this time.
Re:Not solid state... (Score:4, Informative)
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No, the electron transport in vacuum tubes is in a vacuum. Vacuum is not a solid.
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When transistors came out and started to replace vacuum tubes, you would see things like "All Solid State" on radios and such to indicate that they used transistors instead of vacuum tubes.
In this case, it specifically refers to circuits or devices built entirely from solid materials and in which the electrons, or other charge carriers, are confined entirely within the solid material.
dom
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Well, the first link was for a transistor amp that goes to THz speeds.
The second link was for a semiconductor fabbed amp that uses vacuum tube style technology to make it work. It isn't, ,however, at all close to your traditional vacuum tube. First, there's no filament - just applying a differential voltage (10-15V) is eno
'Cause you might not trust DARPA... (Score:1)
I'm not saying I trust Guinness. But anybody who actually trusts the U.S. government -- especially in its current state -- needs to have their head examined.
Government is not something to "trust". It is something to watch over, with a constantly suspicious eye. Government is not your savior, it is a necessary evil, as our founders made abundantly clear.
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I generally trust Guinness and their beers, but their new American Lager gives me pause.
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I know it! I can't stand those evil food stamps going to hungry children...psh..government!
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You make a good point, but it would be an error to accept your general argument in all cases. There are situations where government intervention is the best tool to solve a problem, but many people are so strong in defaulting to the 'more government is bad' position that they are unable to admit when these situations arise.
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but many people are so strong in defaulting to the 'more government is bad' position that they are unable to admit when these situations arise
But you and the other responder above seem to have misunderstood me. I didn't say government was always bad. I just said it has to be watched (like a hawk). "Necessary evil" doesn't mean it's always evil... it means something you'd generally rather do without but probably can't.
My point was that even when it's doing things we might all agree are good, it has to be watched to make sure it's doing it right and efficiently, not doing it improperly or corruptly, or overstepping its bounds (all things the Oba
These only go to 9 (Score:1)
I'll wait for the ones that go to 11
Vacuum power amplifier? (Score:2)
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No, this is about a valve amplifier, not a hoover amplifier.
(which reminds me: Happy Guy Fawkes Day in advance to our British friends here)
Wait a minute (Score:1)
What frequency does a LED put out? At least 430 THz, no?
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What devices use amplifiers?
Every single device uses amplifiers.
Barrier? (Score:2)
Barrier? I think the word you're looking for is "threshold" or even "mark."
It's not a barrier unless there's some property that allows you to hit 999GHz but not 1THz, which in turn requires extraordinary effort to surmount.
Just because you have achieved something new does not mean you have broken a barrier. At best you have broken the English language..
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You break the brag-barrier. Those round numbers aren't especially important in mathematics or engineering, but human cultures today use base ten, so they are important psychologically. That's why the 99-cents/pence on store prices works.
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Interesting component, I had not heard of that type of oscillator before. But the keyword is oscillator. They built an amplifier.
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>At that point the connectors are lossier than the gain maybe...
The pot-o-gold is to do it on silicon, with the downconversion a few nm away.
Great... (Score:1)
DARPA didn't make this, Northrup Grumman did (Score:2)
DARPA is an organization that provides grants to researchers. It does not do the work.
The work was performed by engineers at Northrup Grumman. This work was funded by DARPA.
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Better article at finance.yahoo.com: https://finance.yahoo.com/news... [yahoo.com] that I ran across on Tuesday.(I own some NOC stock).
Cheers,
Dave
Cable TV applications (Score:3)
Does this mean that RF cable television systems will be able to expand their bandwidth?
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There'll be 500,000 channels and still nothing on.
We use stuff like this (Score:4, Interesting)
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I would think 3D printing would be more precise? Because the printer could just create smaller drops of the printing material Why is it not so?
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Why does the 3D printing matter? Some people do make ultra high frequency waveguide with 3D printing - in the case I'm familiar with they "printed" it on a stereolithgraphy machine out of a polymer, then gold plated all of the surfaces. It may have some applications for complex waveguide circuits which are not possible to make by other methods in a given size constraint. However, getting the plating thickness just right on such a small scale when you have to plate the inside of the long and super narrow
I remember the old Damn Fast Op Amps... (Score:2)
What will they call these?
Just listen to the sustain! (Score:1)