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A Laser History of Lincoln Laboratory, Part 1

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Sixty years ago this month, Theodore H. Maiman, a physicist at Hughes Research Laboratories in Malibu, Calif., constructed the first laser using a cylinder of synthetic ruby and photographic flash lamps. There have been many milestones in the last six decades. In honor of this breakthrough, Photonics Media will be running periodic coverage throughout the month.

LEXINGTON, Mass., May 4, 2020 — The MIT Lincoln Laboratory has been the site of numerous discoveries and has yielded some incredibly important technologies — among them, lasers. In the fall of 1962, the laboratory demonstrated a gallium arsenide (GaAs) laser, which was worked on concurrently by groups at General Electric and IBM. The credit for the laser has been the subject of debate, though Nick Holonyak Jr. is credited for the first visible-wavelength GaAs laser. According to Lincoln Laboratory, the use of the lasers evolved from the laboratory’s research into GaAs for use in high-speed electronic devices,...Read full article

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    Published: May 2020
    LasersLincoln LaboratoryMassachusetts Institute of Technology Lincoln LaboratoryMIT Lincoln LaboratoryLaser 60th anniversaryResearch & TechnologyHistory of the Laser

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