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Drew N Maywar

age ~54

from Rochester, NY

Also known as:
  • Drew Nelson Maywar
  • Drew Nelson Maynar
  • Drew R
Phone and address:
155 Danbury Cir, Rochester, NY 14618
(585)2427334

Drew Maywar Phones & Addresses

  • 155 Danbury Cir, Rochester, NY 14618 • (585)2427334
  • 409 Elmwood Ave, Rochester, NY 14620
  • 1545 Mount Hope Ave, Rochester, NY 14620
  • 689 Richardson Rd, Rochester, NY 14623
  • 228 Conant Rd, Rochester, NY 14623
  • 1908 Knollwood Dr, Middletown, NJ 07748
  • 7 Bristel Rd, Holmdel, NJ 07733
  • Port Huron, MI

Us Patents

  • All-Optical Flip-Flop And Control Methods Thereof

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  • US Patent:
    7684708, Mar 23, 2010
  • Filed:
    Sep 8, 2008
  • Appl. No.:
    12/206012
  • Inventors:
    Drew Maywar - Rochester NY, US
    Govind P. Agrawal - Rochester NY, US
  • Assignee:
    University of Rochester - Rochester NY
  • International Classification:
    H04B 10/00
  • US Classification:
    398106, 398107, 398108, 398109, 398110, 398111, 398112, 369 471, 359108
  • Abstract:
    Embodiments of the invention pertain to remote optical control of holding beam-type, optical flip-flop devices, as well as to the devices themselves. All-optical SET and RE-SET control signals operate on a cw holding beam in a remote manner to vary the power of the holding beam between threshold switching values to enable flip-flop operation. Cross-gain modulation and cross-polarization modulation processes can be used to change the power of the holding beam.
  • All-Optical Flip-Flop Device

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  • US Patent:
    6456417, Sep 24, 2002
  • Filed:
    Jun 9, 2000
  • Appl. No.:
    09/589882
  • Inventors:
    Drew Maywar - Rochester NY
    Govind P. Agrawal - Rochester NY
    Yoshiaki Nakano - Tokyo, JP
  • Assignee:
    University of Rochester - Rochester NY
    University of Tokyo - Tokyo
  • International Classification:
    H04B 1012
  • US Classification:
    359245, 359243, 359173, 359179, 250214, 385 17
  • Abstract:
    A bistable optical device such as a semiconductor optical amplifier (SOA) emits an output beam at either a high level or a low level, depending on which of the two stable states the device occupies. The device is switched between the two stable states without a need for a change in the input holding power by changing the hysteresis of the device. The hysteresis is changed by the application of set and reset optical pulses which change the gain and therefore the refractive index of the device. The device has applications to optical communication and computing systems such as optical memory, wavelength conversion and pulse length conversion.

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