Originally posted by: InseName
hey, light's frequency is around 9GHZ, so heres a question, what will happen if a CPU were to exceed that frequency?
Originally posted by: deveraux
It can't get past it then. I've never really tried calculating the frequency of light. Anyway, the only way around that I know of currently, is using quantum computers since current experiments suggests that "entangled" quantums communicated instanteneously (i.e. faster than speed of light). I could be wrong though and yes, wrong forum!
Originally posted by: otispunkmeyer
basically different light has diferent frequencies....frequency isnt speed (in terms of talkin about light) its how many cycles ie how many complete waves per second.
all light travels at 3x10^8 this cant be turned into a frequency as light with diff wavelengths have diff frequencies
Originally posted by: otispunkmeyer
there is already research into quantum computers.....they use light, and light logic gates, obviously very primitve but very fast. i read new scientist its a damn good read every month
Actually, it's E=MC^2/(sqrt(1-(v^2/c^2)), and that square root in the bottom is why it takes infinite energy to go the speed of light... as v approaches c, you end up with e=mc^2/sqrt(0), which boils down to e=infinity...Originally posted by: otispunkmeyer
yeah thats matter. E= MC^2 is all it is, as you approach the speed of light, you get infinitely heavy and there for need infinite energy to continue
Originally posted by: deveraux
Originally posted by: otispunkmeyer
basically different light has diferent frequencies....frequency isnt speed (in terms of talkin about light) its how many cycles ie how many complete waves per second.
all light travels at 3x10^8 this cant be turned into a frequency as light with diff wavelengths have diff frequencies
Actually, I think you've missed the point. IMO, the frequency you're talking about is to do with the lightwave itself vibrating whereas I think the OP is talking more about the distance traversed by light which has nothing to do with its wavelength because like you said, all light travels ~3x10^8 m/s.
I'm really not sure where the OP plucked 9GHz from since I have absolutely no idea how that could even be calculated (speed of light has absolutely no relation to transistor switching). The only thing that I can think of that has even a remote relation to the speed of light is that of the speed of propagation of an electric field.
Electric, electromagnetic and gravitational fields all propagate at the speed of light and hence that is the only relation I can think of with respect to this topic. However, transistors don't switch at this speed, they only get the signal to switch at this speed and then switching still occurs by mechanical means (electrons moving to change the depletion region within a semiconductor).
This topic is way to theoretical and we probably need an expert in this field to be able to really make any concrete comments on this subject.
Originally posted by: otispunkmeyer
there is already research into quantum computers.....they use light, and light logic gates, obviously very primitve but very fast. i read new scientist its a damn good read every month
Are you sure you read that from new scientist? From what I know of quantum computers (my university tutor does heavy research into this topic), quantum computers work by assessing each atom's quantum state and uses that to perform computations. I spoke to him about this a good three years ago, therefore what I'm saying now could very well be outdated as I haven't really kept up-to-date on this.
originally posted by: deveraux
Are you sure you read that from new scientist? From what I know of quantum computers (my university tutor does heavy research into this topic), quantum computers work by assessing each atom's quantum state and uses that to perform computations. I spoke to him about this a good three years ago, therefore what I'm saying now could very well be outdated as I haven't really kept up-to-date on this.
Originally posted by: frootbooter
Actually, it's E=MC^2/(sqrt(1-(v^2/c^2)), and that square root in the bottom is why it takes infinite energy to go the speed of light... as v approaches c, you end up with e=mc^2/sqrt(0), which boils down to e=infinity...Originally posted by: otispunkmeyer
yeah thats matter. E= MC^2 is all it is, as you approach the speed of light, you get infinitely heavy and there for need infinite energy to continue
But whatever, we knew what you meant
Originally posted by: VStrom
I think it would simply take an inverse tachyon pulse into the flux capacitor to make all things possible.
Originally posted by: Jeffyboy
so... maybe the speed of light isn't 300000km/s... since the particles behave like a wavicle... kind of like a sinewave motion... doesn't the actual particle (because it's not following a straight path) go a further distance that what we really measure? ;-)
Jeff
Originally posted by: JediJeb
Frequency of light would not even enter into the question of how high a frequency a processor could have. What would limit this would be the distance an electronic pulse has to travel through the system. As the pulse can only travel at the speed of light then the shorter the path the faster the frequency that pulse can cycled. Theoretically if you reduce the path the pulses travel through the system in half then you can double the frequency.
If the total path through the system is 1 meter and the speed of light is 3x10^8m/s then the theoretical max speed of that system would be 3x10^8 Hz which I believe would be 30MHz. Obviously the path pulses travel through a system are much shorter than that A 1cm total path would yield 3 GHz max , 1mm 30GHz max and so forth. So the smaller the system can be the faster it can run.
Then consider that processors now do more than one operation per cycle, that further multiplies the max. So anyone out there know how to figure out just how fast one can go from this, since I don't really know what the internal distances are in a processor.
Originally posted by: tss4
Actually, both of you are right to a point. Both switching speed and internal propogation delays can limit the speed of a processor and thus its max frequency. However, what's interesting is that the ceiling on processor speed is now due more to a third problem. Heat dissipation. Theremal management in processors is now the biggest limitation to processor speed.
Now as far as the original post. Your 9 GHz is way off, as one of the other posters pointed out frequency of light is a simple calculation (speed of light in medium or vacuum / wavelength) which comes out to order of about 10^14. Perhaps they were refering to bandwidth of a type of optical fiber? Some fiber types have bandwidth distance products closer to that range and you could possibly confuse the two.
Now this does actually impose some interesting possibilities for speeding up computers for several reasons. One is that there would be no electromagnetic interference, so noise on increasingly dense circuits becomes less of a problem. Thermal dissipation is reduced. and lastly it is believed that we can make switches that operate faster than current electrical switches. Also , the bandwidth of light is far greater than electrical signals therefore the input and output to the processor could be faster.