Search
Menu
Bristol Instruments, Inc. - 872 Series LWM 9/25 LB

PIC Lasers and Integrated Solutions for Quantum Technology

Presented by Adam Heiniger

Nov 19, 2025
Facebook X LinkedIn Email
This webinar is premium content provided free to Photonics.com members.

TO VIEW THIS WEBINAR:
Login  Register
About This Webinar
PIC Lasers and Integrated Solutions for Quantum Technology
Quantum technologies reliant on atoms or ions require lasers and downstream optical components, like optical isolators, wavelength references, and phase and intensity modulators. As quantum computers scale to large numbers of qubits, or quantum sensors demand robust, field-deployable lasers with lower size, weight, power, and cost, and related components must become smaller and better integrated. These are the promises of photonic integrated circuits (PICs), and recently narrow linewidth tunable lasers and these downstream components have been demonstrated on-chip.

In this talk, the potential advantages of PIC-based lasers will be presented: Specification advantages in a stand-alone laser, and the possibility to integrate lasers with many other on-chip components. Heiniger describes recent progress in integrated lasers and components, compare the PIC devices to their state-of-the-art macroscopic counterparts, and identify the gaps that must be closed before PIC systems can deliver on their quantum tech-enabling promise.

*** This presentation premiered during the 2025 Photonics Spectra Quantum Summit. For more information on Photonics Media conferences and summits, visit events.photonics.com

About the presenter

Adam HeinigerAdam Heiniger, Ph.D., received his doctorate in 2014 from the Institute of Optics at the University of Rochester, where he studied the use of silicon photonic resonators as optical biosensors. He has also performed research on kW-class CW and ultrafast fiber amplifiers. At TOPTICA, Heiniger has worked in scientific sales and is now the senior product manager, managing the TOPO and Optical Isolators product lines and leading a team of application scientists.
quantumnarrow linewidth lasersphotonic integrated circuitsLasers
We use cookies to improve user experience and analyze our website traffic as stated in our Privacy Policy. By using this website, you agree to the use of cookies unless you have disabled them.