AI at the speed of light just became a possibility
Researchers have demonstrated single-shot tensor computing at the speed of light – a remarkable step towards next-generation Artificial General Intelligence hardware powered by optical computation rather than electronics
2025-11-14
(Press-News.org)
Tensor operations are the kind of arithmetic that form the backbone of nearly all modern technologies, especially artificial intelligence, yet they extend beyond the simple maths we’re familiar with. Imagine the mathematics behind rotating, slicing, or rearranging a Rubik’s cube along multiple dimensions. While humans and classical computers must perform these operations step by step, light can do them all at once.
Today, every task in AI, from image recognition to natural language processing, relies on tensor operations. However, the explosion of data has pushed conventional digital computing platforms, such as GPUs, to their limits in terms of speed, scalability and energy consumption.
Motivated by this pressing problem, international research collaboration led by Dr. Yufeng Zhang from the Photonics Group at Aalto University’s Department of Electronics and Nanoengineering has unlocked a new approach that performs complex tensor computations using a single propagation of light. The result is single-shot tensor computing, achieved at the speed of light itself.
‘Our method performs the same kinds of operations that today’s GPUs handle, like convolutions and attention layers, but does them all at the speed of light,’ says Dr. Zhang. ‘Instead of relying on electronic circuits, we use the physical properties of light to perform many computations simultaneously.’
To achieve this, the researchers encoded digital data into the amplitude and phase of light waves, effectively turning numbers into physical properties of the optical field. When these light fields interact and combine, they naturally carry out mathematical operations such as matrix and tensor multiplications, which form the core of deep learning algorithms. By introducing multiple wavelengths of light, the team extended this approach to handle even higher-order tensor operations.
‘Imagine you’re a customs officer who must inspect every parcel through multiple machines with different functions and then sort them into the right bins,’ Zhang explains. ‘Normally, you’d process each parcel one by one. Our optical computing method merges all parcels and all machines together — we create multiple ‘optical hooks’ that connect each input to its correct output. With just one operation, one pass of light, all inspections and sorting happen instantly and in parallel.’
Another key advantage of this method is its simplicity. The optical operations occur passively as the light propagates, so no active control or electronic switching is needed during computation.
‘This approach can be implemented on almost any optical platform,’ says Professor Zhipei Sun, leader of Aalto University’s Photonics Group. ‘In the future, we plan to integrate this computational framework directly onto photonic chips, enabling light-based processors to perform complex AI tasks with extremely low power consumption.’
Ultimately, the goal is to deploy the method on the existing hardware or platforms established by major companies, says Zhang, who conservatively estimates the approach will be integrated to such platforms within 3-5 years.
‘This will create a new generation of optical computing systems, significantly accelerating complex AI tasks across a myriad of fields,’ he concludes.
The research was published in Nature Photonics on November 14th, 2025.
END
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
2025-11-14
Mangrove ecosystems rank among the most efficient "blue carbon" systems on Earth, capable of absorbing and storing vast quantities of atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2). However, mangroves also release methane (CH4), a potent greenhouse gas, potentially offsetting a portion of their climate mitigation benefits. While prior research has focused primarily on methane emissions from mangrove soils and water surfaces, the role of tree stems as an emission pathway and its significance for global blue carbon accounting have remained largely unexamined.
In a new study, researchers from the South China Botanical Garden of the Chinese Academy of Sciences conducted a global-scale ...
2025-11-14
Food brings people together. It serves as a tool to communicate political stances, to cultivate cross-cultural comprehension or, if necessary, create tensions. Menus can reflect these intentions by using food to create specific psychological effects and convey symbolic messages. But how exactly is it done?
Now, researchers in Portugal have examined menus from diplomatic dinners, state banquets, and receptions hosted over the 20th and 21st centuries to find out how meals reflected and shaped Portuguese foreign policy and ...
2025-11-14
A research team from South China University of Technology has made progress in understanding both the unconditional global existence and the vanishing viscosity limit of parabolic-elliptic coupled systems, with findings that extend existing research. The work, led by Prof. Changjiang Zhu and Dr. Qiaolong Zhu, is published in Acta Mathematica Scientia.
The study focuses on a parabolic-elliptic coupled system, which is a simplified model critical to understanding phenomena where fluid motion interacts with heat radiation. ...
2025-11-14
As global water, energy and food demands intensify under climate change, a scalable, round-the-clock technology that simultaneously produces fresh water, electricity and irrigation water is urgently needed. Now researchers from Harbin Institute of Technology, Wuhan University and Tsinghua University—led by Prof. Shih-Hsin Ho—have unveiled an integrated Water/Electricity-Cogeneration–Cultivation (WEC) platform that couples solar-driven desalination with salinity-gradient power generation and zero-pollution crop irrigation. The work offers a practical blueprint for advancing ...
2025-11-14
As data theft and counterfeiting grow ever more sophisticated, cryptography demands devices that are miniature, reconfigurable and almost impossible to reverse-engineer. Now researchers from the Shenyang Institute of Automation (CAS), Shanghai University and City University of Hong Kong—led by Prof. Haibo Yu and Prof. Wen Jung Li—have created a micro-dynamic multiple encryption device (μ-DMED) built from coumarin-based metamaterials that can hide, rewrite and store multilevel information under different light fields. The work establishes a new paradigm for on-chip, high-security optical encryption.
Why μ-DMED Matters
All-Optical ...
2025-11-14
Professor Wen-Bo Liu's research group at Wuhan University reported a nickel-catalyzed regioselective hydrogen metallization/5-exo-trig cyclization reaction. Using β-propargylcyclobutanone as a starting material, multi-substituted bicyclo[2.1.1]hexanol can be synthesized in one step, followed by skeletal rearrangement to yield 1,2,4-trisubstituted bicyclo[2.1.1]hexanone. This structure can be used for diverse derivatization reactions. DFT computational studies elucidated the crucial role of carbonyl coordination in regioselectivity control. This research provides a new method for obtaining structurally ...
2025-11-14
LA JOLLA, CA—When labor begins, the uterus must coordinate rhythmic, well-timed contractions to deliver the baby safely. While hormones such as progesterone and oxytocin are key contributors to that process, scientists have long suspected that physical forces—in this case, the stretching and pressure that accompany pregnancy and delivery—also play a role.
Now, a new study from Scripps Research published in Science on November 13, 2025, reveals how the uterus senses and responds to those forces at a molecular level. The findings could help scientists better understand the biological roots of conditions such as stalled labor and preterm birth, guiding ...
2025-11-14
This study is led by Professor Wanneng Yang (National Key Laboratory of Crop Genetic Improvement, National Center of Plant Gene Research, Hubei Hongshan Laboratory, Huazhong Agricultural University, Wuhan, China). The team created the Arabidopsis Phenotypic Trait Estimation System (APTES), an open-access pipeline integrating computer vision with optimized deep learning models to automate organ phenotyping.
For individual leaf segmentation, an enhanced Cascade Mask R-CNN model achieved precision, recall, and F1 scores of 0.965, 0.958, and 0.961 respectively, representing consistent ~1% improvements ...
2025-11-14
The inspiring online talk, "Turn Waste Into Wonder: Discover How 'Supercharged Biochar' Can Grow a Greener Future!" is now available on demand.
If you couldn't join us live, now is your chance to catch this fascinating discussion. The event took place on October 29 (Wednesday) and featured Prof. Salah Jellali from Sultan Qaboos University, a visionary researcher turning trash into treasure through science.
In this session, hosted by the top-cited Dr. Yu Luo from Zhejiang University, Prof. Jellali reveals how to upgrade plain biochar using wastewater and industrial leftovers to create a smart, slow-release fertilizer that grows healthier ...
2025-11-14
There are more candidates on the waitlist for a liver transplant than there are available organs, yet about half the time a match is found with a donor who dies after cardiac arrest following the removal of life support, the transplant must be canceled.
For this type of organ donation, called donation after circulatory death, the time between the removal of life support and death must not exceed 30 to 45 minutes, or the surgeons will often reject the liver because of the increased risk of complications to the recipient.
Now, Stanford Medicine researchers have developed a machine learning-based ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
[Press-News.org] AI at the speed of light just became a possibility
Researchers have demonstrated single-shot tensor computing at the speed of light – a remarkable step towards next-generation Artificial General Intelligence hardware powered by optical computation rather than electronics