Spin injection and detection in silicon is a difficult problem, in part because the weak spin-orbit coupling and indirect gap preclude using standard optical techniques. We propose two ways to overcome this difficulty, and illustrate their operation by developing a model for spin-polarized transport across a heterojunction. We find that equilibrium spin polarization of holes leads to a strong modification of the spin and charge dynamics of electrons, and we show how the symmetry properties of the charge current can be exploited to detect spin injection in silicon using currently available techniques.In addition to its central role in conventional electronics, silicon has spin-dependent properties (such as long spin relaxation and decoherence times) that could be particularly useful in spin-based quantum-information processing and spintronics [1]. Unfortunately, the underlying origins of these attractive properties-the indirect band gap, weak spin-orbit coupling, and extremely small concentration of paramagnetic impurities [2]-also preclude using the standard optical methods of spin injection and detection in semiconductors.Circularly polarized light can be used to polarize carriers in semiconductors with a direct band gap. Moreover, both the direction and the magnitude of optically generated charge currents [3,4] and pure spin currents [5,6] can be controlled optically. In the reverse process, the presence of polarized carriers in a direct-gap semiconductor can be detected by measuring the circular