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Andrew M. Netherton

Researcher at University of California, Santa Barbara

Publications -  28
Citations -  287

Andrew M. Netherton is an academic researcher from University of California, Santa Barbara. The author has contributed to research in topics: Silicon photonics & Photonics. The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 21 publications receiving 165 citations. Previous affiliations of Andrew M. Netherton include University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign.

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Inverse-Designed Photonics for Semiconductor Foundries

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors proposed a method to improve the density and performance of silicon photonic transceivers, which is becoming a leading technology in photonics, displacing traditional fiber-optic Transceivers and enabling new applications.
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Multi-wavelength selective crossbar switch.

TL;DR: An 8x4 multi-wavelength selective ring resonator based crossbar switch matrix implemented in a 220-nm silicon photonics foundry for interconnecting electronic packet switches in scalable data centers provides almost full connectivity with significant reduction in latency, cost and complexity.
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An Experimental Demonstration of 160-Gbit/s PAM-4 Using a Silicon Micro-Ring Modulator

TL;DR: In this paper, a single-wavelength, single-polarization 160-Gbit/s four-level pulse-amplitude modulation (PAM-4) employing a single integrated silicon carrier-depletion micro-ring modulator (MRM) is reported.
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Effects of nonlinear loss in high-Q Si ring resonators for narrow-linewidth III-V/Si heterogeneously integrated tunable lasers

TL;DR: This work experimentally shows that the parasitic high-power density in a Si resonator can deteriorate the laser performance at high power levels due to nonlinear loss, and provides explanations and guidelines for high-Q ring resonator designs in heterogeneously integrated tunable lasers.
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On-chip wavelength locking for photonic switches.

TL;DR: An on-chip wavelength reference with a partial drop ring resonator and germanium photodetector is presented that can be used in ring-resonator-based wavelength-selective switches where absolute wavelength alignment is required.