The institute
FEMTO's news

You are here

Artificial intelligence for next-generation ultrafast photonics

How can machine learning and associated methods improve the development of next-generation laser sources and revolutionize applications where ultrafast light plays a central role?

Answer in a review article published in the prestigious journal Nature Photonics involving several members of FEMTO-ST!

The laser celebrates its 60th anniversary this year, and is considered one of the defining inventions of the 20th century.  The laser has not only created an entirely new field of photonic science, but has also led to the development of light sources producing powerful ultrafast pulses that are used in areas essential to society such as medical treatments, biological imaging, communications, and industry.

Surprisingly, however, ultrafast lasers are largely designed and operated using techniques that are little changed from when they were first developed decades ago.  This naturally leads to performance tradeoffs and limitations for applications which require light with precisely tailored characteristics.  Fortunately, an avenue to overcome this bottleneck has recently appeared by combining the latest advances in ultrafast photonics with the powerful tools of artificial intelligence and machine learning. However, although artificial intelligence is now ubiquitous in many areas of science and engineering, its uptake in ultrafast photonics has been limited because it has been unclear exactly how best it can be used to drive future research.

Work appearing recently in the prestigious journal Nature Photonics has now tackled this problem directly.  Written by an international group of scientists, the review article provides a comprehensive overview of how machine learning and associated methods can be applied to both improve developments in next-generation laser sources, and revolutionize applications where ultrafast light plays a central role. 

A unique feature of the review is a series of tutorial elements aimed particularly at non-specialists and students.  The authors are well-known pioneers in diverse fields of nonlinear dynamics, ultrafast optics and machine learning, and they attempt also to provide a roadmap for the future.

One of the authors Professor Dudley from the CNRS Institut FEMTO-ST and the Université Bourgogne Franche-Comté states: “It is our hope that this timely review will remove a lot of the mystery associated with machine learning for workers in ultrafast photonics.  We anticipate that it will stimulate new studies in this field to ensure that the future of ultrafast laser science is as exciting as the last 60 years”.  

This work falls within a broader range of activities at the Institut FEMTO-ST developing photonic artificial intelligence hardware and applying smart techniques to the analysis of optical propagation and systems.  This work is also a key priority theme of the I-SITE national Excellence Initiative and the International Graduate School EIPHI of the Université Bourgogne Franche-Comté

https://doi.org/10.1038/s41566-020-00716-4

Contact : John Dudley

  • The Nanosciences group selected by Omicron for their Result of the Month

    Omicron, a private company that manufactures surface tunneling microscopes (STM), has selected a paper of the Nanosciences group that recently appeared in Physical Review Letters as its Result of the Month for October 2008.

    Read more
  • Clinical Proteomics in Oncology

    The French Institute of Cancer (Canceropole Grand-Est) and the CLIPP Proteomic Platform (Dijon, Besançon) organize the 2nd international conference entitled "Clinical Proteomics in Oncology" in Dijon (France) on July 3rd and 4th , 2008.

    Read more
  • Room temperature stable molecules adsorbed on semi-conductors

    The « nanosciences » group has demonstrated for the first time that conjugated organic molecules can be observed on semi-conducting substrates at room temperature, whether they are isolated or self-organized.

    Read more
  • Best poster award for work on nanoparticle synthesis using microreactor at Indian Conference

    The poster entitled “Gold nanoparticle synthesis at room temperature using microreactor” won the first prize of best poster at the International Conference on Nanoscience and Nanotechnology which took place in Gurgaon, India from December 17th to 21st 2007.

    Read more
  • Fu-Li Hsiao receives a Best Student Paper Award at IEEE Ultrasonics Symposium 2007

    Fu-Li Hsiao, a PhD candidate shared with the National Central university of Taipei, Taiwan, has received one of the Best Student Paper Awards at IEEE Ultrasonics Symposium 2007, held in New York from October 17-31, 2007. The title of his contribution was "Experimental Study of Complete Band Gaps and Waveguiding inside Phononic Crystal Slabs".

    Read more
  • International Symposium on Flow Visualization and Image Processing

    The International Symposium on Flow Visualization and Image Processing is coming back to France! It will take place in Nice from 1st to 4th July, 2008.

    Read more
  • Oliver Wright speaking on "Tracking surface phonons on phononic crystals", September 13, 2007

    Tracking surface phonons on phononic crystals

    Read more
  • Abdelkrim Khelif is the recipient of a CNRS 2007 bronze medal

    Abdelkrim Khelif was awarded one of the 2007 bronze medals of the CNRS. According to the official wording, "The bronze medal acknowledges the first years of research of a talented young scientist. This award is an incentive from the CNRS to pursue well engaged and already productive researches."

    Read more
  • Best Poster Award at ElecMOl’06

    A joint report of collaborative work with researchers of the Laboratoire de Physique Moléculaire was awarded a Best Poster Award during the ElecMOl’06 meeting (December 2006, Minatec, Grenoble, FRANCE). The topic of the communication was about "self-assembly & supramolecular architecture".

    Read more

Pages