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First Room-Temperature Germanium Laser Completed

eldavojohn writes "MIT researchers have built and demonstrated the first room-temperature germanium laser that can produce light at wavelengths suited for communication. This achievement has two parts: '[U]nlike the materials typically used in lasers, germanium is easy to incorporate into existing processes for manufacturing silicon chips. So the result could prove an important step toward computers that move data — and maybe even perform calculations — using light instead of electricity. But more fundamentally, the researchers have shown that, contrary to prior belief, a class of materials called indirect-band-gap semiconductors can yield practical lasers.' While these are only the initial steps in what may become optical computing devices, the article paints it as very promising. The painful details will be published in the journal Optics Letters."

6 of 80 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Fill us in, please? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

    Why is this better than existing solid-state lasers?

    -jcr

    Already being integrated with silicon for circuits. And like the summary says, manufacturing is much easier.

  2. Make mine from Ruritanium by ignavus · · Score: 5, Funny

    Shouldn't Berlin University be the one using the Germanium?

    MIT should have made their laser out of Americium.

    And it sucks to be Cambridge. There is no such thing as Englandium.

    What? No, I don't have anything sensible to say about this story. And anyway, at first I thought it said geranium, and my comment was going to be even stupider than this one.

    --
    I am anarch of all I survey.
    1. Re:Make mine from Ruritanium by dcmoebius · · Score: 5, Funny

      And it sucks to be Cambridge. There is no such thing as Englandium.

      England could use noble gases, perhaps?

    2. Re:Make mine from Ruritanium by MightyDrunken · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It does suck for the English, they could use Europium but the best I could find was Rhodium, meaning rose. The next best is Rutherfordium for Ernest Rutherford as he was a British citizen but was born a New Zealander.
      Hell even Ytterby a Swedish village has two elements named after it (Ytterbium and Yttrium).

      A few more but by no means an exhaustive list.

      • Paris (Lutetium)
      • German state of Hesse (Hassium)
      • Gaul-France (Gallium)
      • France (Francium)
      • Germany (Germanium)
      • Kobold Goblin (Cobalt)
      • California (Californium)
      • University of California, Berkeley (Berkelium)
      • Scandinavia (Scandium)
      • Nobel Institute in Sweden (Nobelium)
  3. Re:Fill us in, please? by Shadow+of+Eternity · · Score: 4, Funny

    Stronger, faster, more efficient.

    Downside is it has a tendency to encroach on polandium lasers...

    --
    A bullet may have your name on it but splash damage is addressed "To whom it may concern."
  4. Re:Fill us in, please? by jank1887 · · Score: 4, Informative

    lasers compatible with silicon processing technology are a good thing. SiGe is a proven IC material set with a sort-of robust processing knowledgebase. Incorporating Germanium optics into silicon designs supposedly will usher in a new era of wacky computing with on-chip optical logic elements, interconnects, etc. Some people think quantum computing would be easier if you were working in the optical instead of electrical domain. Blah blah. People made silicon lase not too long ago, but efficiency was horrible. Germanium can make for a much better optics, and now you can put in together.