A practical scheme to perform the fast Fourier transform in the optical domain is introduced. Optical real-time FFT signal processing is performed at speeds far beyond the limits of electronic digital processing, and with negligible energy consumption. To illustrate the power of the method we demonstrate an optical 400 Gbit/s OFDM receiver. It performs an optical real-time FFT on the consolidated OFDM data stream, thereby demultiplexing the signal into lower bit rate subcarrier tributaries, which can then be processed electronically.
Fabrication of small nanoantennas with high aspect ratios via electron beam lithography is at the current technical limit of nanofabrication and hence significant deviations from the intended shape of small nanobars occur. Via numerical simulations, we investigate the influence of geometrical variations of gap nanoantennas, having dimensions on the order of only a few tens of nanometers. We show that those deviations have a significant influence on the performance of such nanoantennas. In particular, their resonance wavelength as well as the magnitude of absorption and scattering cross section and the electric field distribution in the near field is strongly altered. Our findings are thus of importance for applications based on near field as well as those based on far field interactions with nanoantennas and have to be carefully and individually considered in both cases.
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