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Finally, a True Green Laser

dusty writes "Remember those green lasers from Star Wars? Turns out that faking green lasers has been easy for years, but making true green laser diodes has been the stuff of science fiction. Until recently, that is. Now researchers from Japan have created the world's first true green laser diode. Until now, only red and blue laser diodes were available, and now with the addition of green, new TVs and projectors that are more efficient can be produced. And if you were wondering how green lasers pointers are already produced, it is a hack that involved doubling the frequency of an infrared laser. The new true green laser diodes have much higher efficiency than the current 6%, leading many to expect big time laser display breakthroughs in the near future. Ars Technica has a well-written article on this breakthrough."

30 of 274 comments (clear)

  1. Robustness, too! by Sockatume · · Score: 4, Interesting

    A laser diode is much more robust than a laser diode and the frequency-doubling package of nonlinear crystals.

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    No kidding!!! What do you say at this point?
    1. Re:Robustness, too! by kusanagi374 · · Score: 5, Funny

      A laser diode is much more robust than a laser diode

       

      *head explodes*

    2. Re:Robustness, too! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      A laser diode is much more robust than a laser diode and the frequency-doubling package of nonlinear crystals.

      How waterproof are they? I've a few military applications regarding applying said diodes to a member of the selachimorpha order. Attached between it's snout and first dorsal fin would be the ideal configuration.

    3. Re:Robustness, too! by Mr.+Underbridge · · Score: 5, Informative

      *head explodes*

      "A laser diode is much more robust than (a laser diode and the frequency-doubling package of nonlinear crystals).

    4. Re:Robustness, too! by Allicorn · · Score: 5, Funny

      (laser diode).robustness > ( (laser diode)+(frequency-doubling package of nonlinear crystals) ).robustness

      Better?

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    5. Re:Robustness, too! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      expected ;

    6. Re:Robustness, too! by dmbasso · · Score: 5, Funny

      it was Python, you insensitive clod!

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      `echo $[0x853204FA81]|tr 0-9 ionbsdeaml`@gmail.com
    7. Re:Robustness, too! by noundi · · Score: 5, Funny

      Do it yourself, it's open source.

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      I am the lawn!
    8. Re:Robustness, too! by CarpetShark · · Score: 4, Funny

      frequency-doubling package of nonlinear crystals
      ^ frequency not defined
            ^ doubling not defined
                    ^ the reserved word "package" cannot be used in this context
                        ^ the reserved word "of" cannot be used in this context
                              ^ the reserved word "nonlinear" cannot be used in this context
                                    ^ chamber in use, dilithium crystals cannot be accessed at this time
                                          ^ expected ;

    9. Re:Robustness, too! by Eevee · · Score: 4, Funny

      Would you settle for a member of the perciformes order with an attitude?

    10. Re:Robustness, too! by wealthychef · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It's not illiteracy, it's attention deficit. Why read the whole sentence when you can just read until you've formed an opinion and ignore the rest?

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      Currently hooked on AMP
    11. Re:Robustness, too! by wealthychef · · Score: 4, Funny

      Then you left out a leading space.

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      Currently hooked on AMP
    12. Re:Robustness, too! by gparent · · Score: 5, Funny

      It's not illiteracy, it's attention deficit. Why read the whole sentence when you can just read

      *head explodes*

    13. Re:Robustness, too! by Joe+Snipe · · Score: 5, Funny

      *head

      *head explodes*

      *head explodes*
      *head explodes*
      *head explodes*

      ok seriously, you guys? Can we?

      You make my head explode every time you talk to me.
      And when your commenting, its like a lobotomy.
      You think that I am dumb, wont you just explain to me?
      I need a dictionary or car analogy.

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      Sometimes, life itself is sarcasm...
  2. sweet! by gEvil+(beta) · · Score: 5, Funny

    I can't wait to get my new RGB Laser TV(TM)! Finally all those myths about how you'll go blind from staring at the TV will be reality!

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    This guy's the limit!
    1. Re:sweet! by Jurily · · Score: 5, Funny

      I can't wait to get my new RGB Laser TV(TM)! Finally all those myths about how you'll go blind from staring at the TV will be reality!

      Warning: don't watch TV with remaining eye.

  3. as a physicist and a canadian it is only right for by ILongForDarkness · · Score: 4, Funny

    me to be the first to say: "laaayyser".

  4. This means green jobs by Teresita · · Score: 5, Funny

    I'm sure Al Gore is thrilled with this news of green laser technology.

  5. Fantastic by Rik+Sweeney · · Score: 4, Funny

    All we need now is some true frickin' sharks and we're in business.

  6. Snow Crash by Derek+Pomery · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Sweet. Now we just need it to draw on your eyeball.
    And not blind you.
    " Down inside the computer are three lasers - a red one, a green one, and
    a blue one. They are powerful enough to make a bright light but not powerful
    enough to burn through the back of your eyeball and broil your brain, fry
    your frontals, lase your lobes. As everyone learned in elementary school,
    these three colors of light can be combined, with different intensities, to
    produce any color that Hiro's eye is capable of seeing.
              In this way, a narrow beam of any color can be shot out of the innards
    of the computer, up through that fisheye lens, in any direction. Through the
    use of electronic mirrors inside the computer, this beam is made to sweep
    back and forth across the lenses of Hiro's goggles, in much the same way as
    the electron beam in a television paints the inner surface of the eponymous
    Tube. The resulting image hangs in space in front of Hiro's view of Reality."

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    -- perl -e'print pack"H*","6e656d6f406d38792e6f7267"' /. ate my old sig. Bastards.
    1. Re:Snow Crash by Daniel+Dvorkin · · Score: 4, Interesting

      my Nokia 810 and iphone kicks the crap out of any wearable I have had over the past 15 years in my personal research.

      And your typical smartphone kicks the crap out of the typical desktop computer from a decade ago. Do you see any reason to think this trend (smaller + more powerful) won't continue?

      Snow Crash tech is only useful for plugging in when you are a blob of goo at home never leaving your chair. The raging BS about logging in while riding his motorcycle will never exist as I could not even stand the speed and status info in my helmet when I used to race.

      Fighter pilots have been using heads-up displays for almost half a century, and at this point, the view from inside a modern fighter cockpit looks more like a virtual world than it does like the real one. The same thing is happening in commercial aviation, and just starting to happen with driving and motorcycling. Maybe you didn't like your HUD, but I can almost guarantee you that future racers won't feel the same way. It's just a matter of what you're used to.

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      The correlation between ignorance of statistics and using "correlation is not causation" as an argument is close to 1.
  7. What Headline/Summary Nonsense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Firstly, I really don't see how the solid state lasers using frequency doubling are "fake" lasers.

    Even so, outside the realm of small laser pointers, there are such a thing as gas lasers and they can produce a true green emission.

    The possible breakthrough is the production of more efficient semiconductor lasers that emit in the green range, not the production of the first "True Green Laser".

    Yeah, this is Slashdot...Whatever

    1. Re:What Headline/Summary Nonsense by wigaloo · · Score: 5, Informative

      Let me add to what you have said: Green beams can be obtained from solid-state infrared lasers (e.g., Nd:YAG) by using KTP or KDP crystals, which combine two photons into one (!) with twice the energy/frequency. The resulting beam is collimated and coherent - i.e., the same as the original and any other laser beam. The technique was first demonstrated in 1961, predating this new discovery by almost half a century. Green laser diodes are most definitely interesting and useful, but to suggest that the green lasers from before were "fake" is incorrect. The new part here is having green as the fundamental frequency from a solid-state laser.

  8. True green laser? by actionbastard · · Score: 5, Informative

    Title should read "True green laser diode". 'Green' laser output has been achievable for for more than three decades with Argon ion, Krypton ion, and Copper vapor lasers. This just makes it more 'convenient' to achieve green output.

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    Sig this!
  9. Re:Lasers? Star Wars? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Hate to break it to you. They were props.

  10. Re:Not doubling the infrared, but slowing by half. by necro81 · · Score: 4, Informative

    Nothing is slowed down. Light always goes at the same speed. Guess its name

    That is not fully correct. It is true that the speed of light, in a vacuum, is a constant. But, the speed of light through a transparent medium is something less than c. How much light gets slowed down by a medium is frequency-dependent, as described by snell's law, which is how lenses are able to bend light.

    The fact that the speed of light through a medium is less than c also allows for some more exotic phenomena, such as Cherenkov radiation, created when a particle's velocity through a medium exceeds that medium's speed of light (but definitely remains less than c).

  11. This is a pulsed laser, not continuous wave by rcb1974 · · Score: 4, Informative

    From the article it says, "At Sumitomo Electric, they have overcome this problem by developing a GaN crystal which inhibits the efficiency drop, resulting in room temperature pulse operation of a laser diode emitting in the pure-green region at 531nm." Having worked on development of GaN blue lasers, there are a lot of challenges to getting a reliable, continuous wave (CW) diode laser that operates at this wavelength. My guess is they hammered their green diode laser with very short high power pulses just to get it to lase. So it is probably not a very useful laser if it cannot operate in CW mode.

  12. Re:as a physicist and a canadian it is only right by autocracy · · Score: 4, Funny

    They say the same thing, but they say it after the Canadian physicist.

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    SIG: HUP
  13. Excellent story about excellent science. by Futurepower(R) · · Score: 4, Informative

    Firstly, I really don't see how the solid state lasers using frequency doubling are "fake" lasers.

    From the Slashdot summary: "And if you were wondering how green lasers pointers are already produced, it is a hack that involved doubling the frequency of an infrared laser. The new true green laser diodes..."

    The intention is not to say they are fake lasers. The former green solid-state laser devices aren't just laser diodes; they are diodes plus another complicated structure. The new green laser devices are true diode lasers.

    Corrections to the Ars article:

    "Ever wonder why projector systems and televisions don't use laser illumination?"

    More important error, and my guess about the correct information: "For instance, blue laser diodes use a gallium nitride system, and figuring out how to get indium nitride to mix through the gallium nitride evenly turned out to be quite difficult."

    Full Text PDF of the Applied Physics Express scientific paper. (Free)

  14. Re:White laser lights? by lorenlal · · Score: 4, Funny

    Now the trick is finding enough sharks to make the display useful.