No Arabic abstract
Photonic signal processing is essential in the optical communication and optical computing. Numerous photonic signal processors have been proposed, but most of them exhibit limited reconfigurability and automaticity. A feature of fully automatic implementation and intelligent response is highly desirable for the multipurpose photonic signal processors. Here, we report and experimentally demonstrate a fully self-learning and reconfigurable photonic signal processor based on an optical neural network chip. The proposed photonic signal processor is capable of performing various functions including multichannel optical switching, optical multiple-input-multiple-output descrambler and tunable optical filter. All the functions are achieved by complete self-learning. Our demonstration suggests great potential for chip-scale fully programmable optical signal processing with artificial intelligence.
For the abstract, please see the submitted article.
Realization of deep learning with coherent optical field has attracted remarkably attentions presently, which benefits on the fact that optical matrix manipulation can be executed at speed of light with inherent parallel computation as well as low latency. Photonic neural network has a significant potential for prediction-oriented tasks. Yet, real-value Backpropagation behaves somewhat intractably for coherent photonic intelligent training. We develop a compatible learning protocol in complex space, of which nonlinear activation could be selected efficiently depending on the unveiled compatible condition. Compatibility indicates that matrix representation in complex space covers its real counterpart, which could enable a single channel mingled training in real and complex space as a unified model. The phase logical XOR gate with Mach-Zehnder interferometers and diffractive neural network with optical modulation mechanism, implementing intelligent weight learned from compatible learning, are presented to prove the availability. Compatible learning opens an envisaged window for deep photonic neural network.
Deep neural networks with applications from computer vision and image processing to medical diagnosis are commonly implemented using clock-based processors, where computation speed is limited by the clock frequency and the memory access time. Advances in photonic integrated circuits have enabled research in photonic computation, where, despite excellent features such as fast linear computation, no integrated photonic deep network has been demonstrated to date due to the lack of scalable nonlinear functionality and the loss of photonic devices, making scalability to a large number of layers challenging. Here we report the first integrated end-to-end photonic deep neural network (PDNN) that performs instantaneous image classification through direct processing of optical waves. Images are formed on the input pixels and optical waves are coupled into nanophotonic waveguides and processed as the light propagates through layers of neurons on-chip. Each neuron generates an optical output from input optical signals, where linear computation is performed optically and the nonlinear activation function is realised opto-electronically. The output of a laser coupled into the chip is uniformly distributed among all neurons within the network providing the same per-neuron supply light. Thus, all neurons have the same optical output range enabling scalability to deep networks with large number of layers. The PDNN chip is used for 2- and 4-class classification of handwritten letters achieving accuracies of higher than 93.7% and 90.3%, respectively, with a computation time less than one clock cycle of state-of-the-art digital computation platforms. Direct clock-less processing of optical data eliminates photo-detection, A/D conversion, and the requirement for a large memory module, enabling significantly faster and more energy-efficient neural networks for the next generations of deep learning systems.
We design and model a single-layer, passive, all-optical silicon photonics neural network to mitigate optical link nonlinearities. The network nodes are formed by silicon microring resonators whose transfer function has been experimentally measured. Both the transmitted amplitude and phase maps of the nonlinear response of the microrings are parametrized as a function of the wavelength and of the signal power to form tunable activation functions of the single nodes in the complex valued network. Training of the network is achieved by a particle swarm optimizer which selects the complex weights and the activation functions. We demonstrate that a single feed-forward layer with a single node perceptron is effective in compensating linear and nonlinear distortions over a broad range of signal-to-noise-ratio and propagation lengths. We propose to implement this simple neuronal network as an optical link transparent layer to correct signal distortions.
We propose and experimentally demonstrate an optical pulse sampling method for photonic blind source separation. The photonic system processes and separates wideband signals based on the statistical information of the mixed signals and thus the sampling frequency can be orders of magnitude lower than the bandwidth of the signals. The ultra-fast optical pulse functions as a tweezer that collects samples of the signals at very low sampling rates, and each sample is short enough to maintain the statistical properties of the signals. The low sampling frequency reduces the workloads of the analog to digital conversion and digital signal processing systems. In the meantime, the short pulse sampling maintains the accuracy of the sampled signals, so the statistical properties of the undersampling signals are the same as the statistical properties of the original signals. With the optical pulses generated from a mode-locked laser, the optical pulse sampling system is able to process and separate mixed signals with bandwidth over 100GHz and achieves a dynamic range of 30dB.