Tag Archives: laser

Coaxial ‘cables’ make great lasers, too

February 8, 2012

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A coaxial cable plug. The coaxial nanolaser is more than 15,000 times smaller. Photo by mikemol via flickr.

When Oliver Heaviside invented the coaxial cable in 1880 he could not have foreseen the implications of his idea on modern nanotechnology. His coaxial cables consist of three layers: an inner metallic core, surrounded by an insulator, surrounded by a metallic layer on the outside. The benefit of this design is that the outer metallic layer shields the electrical signal through the cable from outside interference. This makes coaxial cables very useful for information transfer, and coax cables are used for TV antenna cables or some computer network cables. Mercedeh Khajavikhan, Yeshaiahu Fainman and colleagues from the University of California, San Diego now present a completely new application: they have fabricated coaxial lasers on the nanoscale that turn on without the usual minimum threshold power of usual lasers. To do this they had to shrink the coaxial cables first. These lasers are more than 15,000 times smaller than typical coaxial cables.

The nanoscale coaxial laser. Similar to coaxial cables it consists of an inner metal pillar and an outer metal shield. The structure is also protected from interference from the top. Inside is a semiconductor light emitter (red; insulated from the top metal through a SiO2 plug). The laser light exits through the hole in the substrate. Figure by Mercedeh Khajavikhan and Aleksandar Simic.

The benefit of a coaxial cable is that between the core and the outer metal layer well-defined and controlled electromagnetic waves can propagate shielded from any outside influence. Furthermore, shrinking such a device to the nanoscale – to length scales comparable to the light used – means that only the smallest optical beam pattern for the wavelength of light, known as the fundamental mode, fits into the small space between the metal structures. The other modes would be too large. […]

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The ‘anti-laser’

February 18, 2011

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Photo by piglicker via flickr.

I don’t have much time this week and next to blog, but yesterday Science published an interesting paper by Hui Cao and colleagues at Yale that is hard to ignore. It is the ‘anti-laser’.

In short, this anti-laser does exactly the same what a laser does, just with time reversed. You can do that because the physics involved in the laser doesn’t change when you reverse the time. It is as if you play a laser backwards.

A laser requires at least two energy states that are placed between two mirrors. An electron in an upper energy state relaxes to the lower one and emits light. If the electrons are continuously pumped into the upper state, the light that bounces between the mirrors becomes increasingly intensive and at some point lasing kicks in. One of the two mirrors is semi-transparent, so the laser light can get out of the device.

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2010 – twelve months of great science

December 27, 2010

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The past year has been a great year for science with major advances in several areas. Too many exciting results to mention here. Instead, to reflect about the past year I have chosen a representative paper for each month of the year that I hope can serve as an example of the great science going on in a number of research fields. Of course, this is a highly subjective and personal collection, and indeed there might be others worth mentioning. But the aim was also to provide a balanced overview of the year that covers a variety of topics.

Of course, if you have an exciting paper to add, please feel free to use the comments section below to let us know!

Anyway, enough said, here are some of my highlights from the past year:

Simulations of electronic excitations in an iron-based superconductor. Image by Oak Ridge National Laboratory via flickr.

JANUARY – iron-based superconductors

Since they were discovered in 2008, iron-based superconductors, the pnictides, have been one of the hottest topics in condensed matter physics. Part of their appeal stems from the fact that they are based on iron, which is a magnetic element. Normally, magnets and superconductivity exclude each other.

The iron-based compounds have a similar crystal structure as the so-called cuprates, which are the materials with the highest superconducting temperatures known. The mechanism for these high-temperature superconductors is unknown, and studying the iron-based superconductors may also be relevant to the understanding of the cuprates.

This paper published in Science shows for the first time that the electrons in the iron-based superconductors show a periodic arrangement that is different to the periodicity of the atoms in the crystal. Similar observations have been made in the cuprates, and their understanding is considered important to the mechanism of high-temperature superconductivity.

Chuang, T., Allan, M., Lee, J., Xie, Y., Ni, N., Bud’ko, S., Boebinger, G., Canfield, P., & Davis, J. (2010). Nematic Electronic Structure in the “Parent” State of the Iron-Based Superconductor Ca(Fe1-xCox)2As2 Science, 327 (5962), 181-184 DOI: 10.1126/science.1181083

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