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After 60 Years, a Room-Temperature Maser

gbrumfiel writes "Before there were lasers, there were masers: systems that amplified microwaves instead of light. Solid state masers are used in a variety of applications, including deep space communication, but they've never been as popular as lasers, in part because they have to be cooled to near absolute zero in order to work. Now a team of British physicists have built a room-temperature maser using some spare chemicals and a laser they bought off of eBay. The new device is 100 million times as powerful as existing masers and might revolutionize telecommunications."

2 of 102 comments (clear)

  1. Super Wow by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    This is frikken huge news, if it pans out. I'm old enough to remember when news of the first MASERs came out. Before LASERs.
        Just the applications alone in Atomic Spectroscopy, ECR technology, high power communications- do you realize just how sloppy the frequency spread of Klystrons and similar devices are? Accelerator Technology, space charge cooling,... the implications for Fusion research...
        Super Wow.
        If it pans out.

  2. Re:Absolute Zero by TubeSteak · · Score: 4, Interesting

    You know what's better than having to use off-the-shelf cryogenic equipment?
    Not having to use it.

    IMO, this is the real news:

    He came across a decade-old publication by Japanese researchers suggesting that when the electrons in pentacene are excited by a laser, they configure such that the molecule could work as a maser, possibly even at room temperature.

    I wonder how many other scientific breakthroughs are just sitting around waiting for anyone to conduct basic followup on a research paper.

    --
    [Fuck Beta]
    o0t!