The 2023 Terahertz Science and Technology Roadmap

Leitenstorfer, A. et al. (2023) The 2023 Terahertz Science and Technology Roadmap. Journal of Physics D: Applied Physics, 56(22), 223001. (doi: 10.1088/1361-6463/acbe4c)

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Abstract

Terahertz (THz) radiation encompasses a wide spectral range within the electromagnetic spectrum that extends from microwaves to the far infrared (100 GHz to ~30 THz). Within its frequency boundaries exist a broad variety of scientific disciplines that have presented, and continue to present, technical challenges to researchers. During the past 50 years, for instance, the demands of the scientific community have substantially evolved and with a need for advanced instrumentation to support radio astronomy, Earth observation, weather forecasting, security imaging, telecommunications, non-destructive device testing and much more. Furthermore, applications have required an emergence of technology from the laboratory environment to production-scale supply and in-the-field deployments ranging from harsh ground-based locations to deep space. In addressing these requirements, the research and development community has advanced related technology and bridged the transition between electronics and photonics that high frequency operation demands. The multidisciplinary nature of THz work was our stimulus for creating the 2017 THz Science and Technology Roadmap (S S Dhillon et al 2017 J. Phys. D: Appl. Phys. 50 043001). As one might envisage, though, there remains much to explore both scientifically and technically and the field has continued to develop and expand rapidly. It is timely, therefore, to revise our previous roadmap and in this 2023 version we both provide an update on key developments in established technical areas that have important scientific and public benefit, and highlight new and emerging areas that show particular promise. The developments that we describe thus span from fundamental scientific research, such as THz astronomy and the emergent area of THz quantum optics, to highly applied and commercially and societally impactful subjects that include 6G THz communications, medical imaging, and climate monitoring and prediction.

Item Type:Articles
Status:Published
Refereed:Yes
Glasgow Author(s) Enlighten ID:Li, Professor Chong
Authors: Leitenstorfer, A., Moskalenko, A. S., Kampfrath, T., Kono, J., Castro-Camus, E., Peng, K., Qureshi, N., Turchinovich, D., Tanaka, K., Markelz, A., Havenith, M., Hough, C., Joyce, H. J., Padilla, W., Zhou, B., Kim, K.-Y., Zhang, X.-C., Jepsen, P. U., Dhillon, S., Vitiello, M. S., Linfield, E. H., Davies, A. G., Hoffmann, M., Lewis, R., Tonouchi, M., Klarskov, P., Seifert, T., Gerasimenko, Y., Mihailovic, D. D., Huber, R., Boland, J., Mitrofanov, O., Dean, P., Ellison, B., Huggard, P., Rea, S., Walker, C., Leisawitz, D., Gao, J. R., Li, C., Chen, Q., Valusis, G., Wallace, V. P., MacPherson, E., Shang, X., Hesler, J., Ridler, N., Renaud, C., Kallfass, I., Nagatsuma, T., Zeitler, A., Arnone, D., Johnston, M., and Cunningham, J.
College/School:College of Science and Engineering > School of Engineering > Electronics and Nanoscale Engineering
Journal Name:Journal of Physics D: Applied Physics
Publisher:IOP Publishing
ISSN:0022-3727
ISSN (Online):1361-6463
Published Online:23 February 2023
Copyright Holders:Copyright © 2023 The Authors
First Published:First published in Journal of Physics D: Applied Physics 56(22): 223001
Publisher Policy:Reproduced under a Creative Commons License

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