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It is proposed that the propagation of light in disordered photonic lattices can be harnessed as a random projection that preserves distances between a set of projected vectors. This mapping is enabled by the complex evolution matrix of a photonic lattice with diagonal disorder, which turns out to be a random complex Gaussian matrix. Thus, by collecting the output light from a subset of the waveguide channels, one can perform an embedding from a higher-dimension to a lower-dimension space that respects the Johnson-Lindenstrauss lemma and nearly preserves the Euclidean distances. It is discussed that distance-preserving random projection through photonic lattices requires intermediate disorder levels that allow diffusive spreading of light from a single channel excitation, as opposed to strong disorder which initiates the localization regime. The proposed scheme can be utilized as a simple and powerful integrated dimension reduction stage that can greatly reduce the burden of a subsequent neural computing stage.
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We study the focusing of light through random photonic materials using wavefront shaping. We explore a novel approach namely binary amplitude modulation. To this end, the light incident to a random photonic medium is spatially divided into a number o
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