Department of Information technology, Delft University of Technology, Hitachi (United Kingdom), University of Copenhagen, IBM Research - Zurich, Foundation For Fundamental Research On Matter, French National Centre for Scientific Research, Thomson Csf (France), University of Konstanz, Foundation For Fundamental Research On Matter, Institute of Science and Technology Austria, École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne, STMicroelectronics (Italy), University of Cambridge, Max Planck Society, University of Malta, Aalto University, University of Camerino, University of Erlangen-Nuremberg
The hybrid optomechanical technologies (HOT) consortium will lay the foundation for a new generation of devices, which connect, or indeed contain, several platforms at the nanoscale in a single “hybrid” system. As hybrid interfaces they will allow to harness the unique advantages of each subsystem within a nano-scale footprint, while as integrated hybrid devices they will enable entirely novel functionalities. A particular focus will be on ...