Register
Sign In
Subscribe
Advertise
Publications
Photonics Spectra
BioPhotonics
Vision Spectra
Photonics Showcase
Photonics Marketplace
Photonics Handbook
Photonics Dictionary
Newsletters
News & Features
Latest News
Latest Products
Feature Articles
All Things Photonics Podcast
Photonics Spectra
Now
Topics
Lasers & Light Sources
Optics
Materials & Coatings
Imaging
Sensors & Detectors
Test & Measurement
Integrated Photonics
Spectroscopy
Biophotonics
Machine Vision
Marketplace
Supplier Search
Product Search
Career Center
Webinars & Events
Webinars
Photonics Media Virtual Events
Industry Events Calendar
Videos
Resources
White Papers
Bookstore
Contribute an Article
Suggest a Webinar
Submit a Press Release
Subscribe
Advertise
Become a Member
Marketplace
Supplier Search
Product Search
Career Center
Publications
Photonics Spectra
BioPhotonics
Vision Spectra
Photonics Showcase
Photonics Marketplace
Photonics Handbook
Photonics Dictionary
Newsletters
News & Features
Latest News
Latest Products
Feature Articles
All Things Photonics Podcast
Photonics Spectra
Now
Topics
Lasers & Light Sources
Optics
Materials & Coatings
Imaging
Sensors & Detectors
Test & Measurement
Integrated Photonics
Spectroscopy
Biophotonics
Machine Vision
Webinars & Events
Webinars
Photonics Media Virtual Events
Industry Events Calendar
Videos
Resources
White Papers
Bookstore
Contribute an Article
Suggest a Webinar
Submit a Press Release
Subscribe
Advertise
Become a Member
Register
Sign In
submit press release
(9,433 items)
Research & Technology News
Researchers Take Crucial Step Toward Miniature Optical Devices
Jan 1, 1998 — Two Columbia University researchers have advanced the development of miniaturized optical devices such as microlasers and implantable medical sensors. Richard Osgood and Miguel Levy bonded a 9-µm-thick sheet of magnetic garnet, a photonic material that permits transmission of light in only one direction, to a semiconductor. The discovery has opened a host of possibilities including miniaturized optical processors for fiber optic telecommunications.
Sand-Size Transmission Aids Space Exploration
Jan 1, 1998 — A group of scientists at Sandia National Laboratories have developed a transmission about the size of a grain of sand that could prove useful in optical telescopes and optical switching in telephone lines. The minuscule polysilicon transmission will...
Scientists Solve H 2 O Mystery
Jan 1, 1998 — For the last 50 years, scientists have sought to understand the biochemical and physical processes that take place in liquid H2O. They employed such methods as dielectric relaxation, spectroscopy and nuclear magnetic resonance, but these methods...
Software Gauges Efficiency of AR Coatings
Jan 1, 1998 — A British researcher has developed software that analyzes new antireflection coatings for optical systems. Geoff Adams, of UK-based Optical Software Co., has developed WinLens for Spindler & Hoyer -- software for designers of multi-glass...
Stabilized Laser Source Is Key to Interferogram
Jan 1, 1998 — A researcher from CSO Mesure in Grenoble, France, has produced a high-frequency laser source that could prove useful in next-generation interferometric spectrometers. Developed as part of a project to take metrology readings from space, CSO's laser...
Vienna Group Generates Coherent X-Ray Source
Jan 1, 1998 — VIENNA, Austria -- A group of researchers at the Vienna University of Technology has generated a coherent x-ray source that could pave the way for high-contrast biological imaging. The collimated x-ray beam, long-sought by legions of researchers, is...
Diffraction Brings Street Signs to Life
Dec 1, 1997 — ROSKILDE, Denmark -- A new process that impresses holographic optical elements onto polymer rolls could significantly reduce the cost of keeping roads safe at night. According to Ibsen Micro Structures developmental engineer Michael Rasmussen,...
Laser Aids Hair Restoration
Dec 1, 1997 — A carbon dioxide laser in combination with a computerized pattern generator creates recipient sites for hair grafts more effectively than traditional methods. That's the finding of Dr. Barry DiBernardo, who presented a paper advocating the use of...
Laser Helps Take Twinkle out of Stargazing
Dec 1, 1997 — LIVERMORE, Calif. -- A laser system that makes a false star glow in the Earth's upper atmosphere will help astronomers study some of the universe's faintest objects. The same phenomenon that makes stars appear to twinkle to ground-based observers...
Magnetic Field Alters Disc's Properties
Dec 1, 1997 — GRENOBLE, France -- A team of scientists has discovered a way to use a magnetic field to alter the transparency of a plastic disc. Bart van Tiggelen of the Universite Joseph Fourier and researchers from the Max Planck Institute made the discovery,...
New Sensor Combines CMOS and CCD
Dec 1, 1997 — DALLAS -- Engineers at Texas Instruments have combined the performance features of the charge-coupled device (CCD) and the manufacturing advantages of the complementary metal oxide semiconductor (CMOS) to produce what they call the bulk charge...
Pentagon's Laser Test Fails to Meet Objective
Dec 1, 1997 — When the Pentagon fired a mid-infrared laser at an orbiting US Air Force satellite in October, it failed to accomplish one of the experiment's main objectives: recording the impact. The Defense Department aimed the laser at an infrared camera...
Photonics Brings Dinosaur to Life
Dec 1, 1997 — SAN ANSELMO, Calif. -- Museums, faced with the dilemma of making their displays more interactive and paying top dollar for fossils, have turned to laser scanning as a solution to their troubles. "It's a shame, but museums are losing attendance,"...
Princeton Promises Much on Organic Lasers
Dec 1, 1997 — PRINCETON, N.J. -- It may not carry the fury of the big bang or death gene debates, but to those in the diode laser business organic lasers have sparked more than polite dinner conversation. Princeton University researchers say they have the...
Quick Screening Provides Key to New Luminescent Materials
Dec 1, 1997 — Researchers have long sought new compounds for ultraviolet-excited phosphors -- important for the development of flat panel displays and lighting. Because there are no reliable theories to predict the relation between composition and efficiency,...
Ring Laser Measures Earth's Rotation
Dec 1, 1997 — CHRISTCHURCH, New Zealand -- In an underground cave, deep within the Cashmere peninsula, the musical note E-flat has taken on special meaning. Researchers from the University of Canterbury have installed a giant ring gyroscope to keep track of...
Solid-State Diode Lasers Gain Ground
Dec 1, 1997 — Diode and diode-pumped lasers are about to find significant commercial applications, several experts on commercial and research photonics told a standing-room-only audience during a session at the Optical Society of America Annual Meeting in Long...
Thomson and Oxford Unveil Fingerprint ID System on a Chip
Dec 1, 1997 — Set for release early next year, the chip uses thermal imaging to capture an image of a person's finger. The image data is then reconstructed by a Thomson algorithm, and the fingerprint is verified. Unlike other fingerprint verification systems, the...
Xerox Makes Colorful Splash with Blue Diode Laser
Dec 1, 1997 — PALO ALTO, Calif. -- A small -- a very small -- spot of color here and there is behind Xerox's development of a blue laser diode. Xerox hopes to use the nitride-based semiconductor technology to create a new line of high-resolution printers. Like...
A Photonics-First Sheds Light on Global Warming
Nov 1, 1997 — GREENBELT, Md. -- A spaceborne photonic combination could help knock some of the guesswork out of studying global warming and its relationship to aircraft. Scientists know that cirrus clouds hold IR radiation in the atmosphere, raising the Earth's...
Boom! From Light Comes Matter
Nov 1, 1997 — PALO ALTO, Calif. -- In Physics 101, our instructors drilled us on the Law of Matter Conservation: "Thou shalt not create matter from nothing." However, a team of 20 physicists/lawbreakers has done just that, by converting light into matter. The...
Chilly Weather Poses Problems for Fiber Optic Cables
Nov 1, 1997 — Cold weather has proven troublesome for fiber optic cable performance, often changing the internal geometry of the fiber. Scientists from Bellcore in San Diego have monitored the problem during the past several years, subjecting fiber optic cable to...
CO2 Laser Beam Propels Miniature Rocket
Nov 1, 1997 — The Advanced Space Transportation Program has launched a miniature rocket propelled by a ground-based laser beam. Scientists at White Sands Missile Range in New Mexico aimed a 10-kW pulsed CO2 laser at the launch vehicle, raising it seven feet off...
Femtosecond Experts: Fast Is Fun
Nov 1, 1997 — Research at the very edge of the time scale for laser pulses is becoming more exciting, according to two ultrafast-laser experts who shared the Schawlow Prize (and lecture) at the American Physical Society's Interdisciplinary Laser Science...
Fiber Advance Eases Splicing
Nov 1, 1997 — CORNING, N.Y. -- In a move that should improve splicing efficiency and lower system installation costs, Corning Incorporated has tweaked its production process for single-mode fiber and tightened its core/clad concentricity specs by 25 percent....
<
1
2
3
...
367
368
369
370
371
...
376
377
378
>
December 2025
Subscribe
Advertise
Issue Library
Latest Products
Dual-Axis Motorized Stages
Optimal Engineering Systems Inc.
Machine Vision Cables
OKI Electric Cable Co. Ltd.
Narrow-Linewidth Pump Laser
Applied Optoelectronics Inc. (AOI)
Broadband Femtosecond Lasers
HUBNER Photonics GmbH
InGaAs Avalanche Photodiode
Excelitas Technologies Corp.
Semiconductor Metrology Instrument
Rigaku Corp.
AI Compute Box
e-con Systems Inc.
Automated Inspection System
TRIOPTICS
CCD Linear Image Sensor
Toshiba Electronic Devices & Storage Corp.
6-Axis Alignment System
PI (Physik Instrumente) LP, Motion Control, Air Bearings, Piezo Mechanics
Features
Innovative Optical Lithography Advances High-Resolution Semiconductor Laser Production
Photonics Spectra
, Dec 2025
Image Sensor Design Innovation Shines When the Lights Go Down
Photonics Spectra
, Dec 2025
Polymer Optics Reveal That Discounting Aspheres Comes at a Cost
Photonics Spectra
, Dec 2025
Explore Our Content
News
Feature Articles
Latest Products
Webinars
White Papers
All Things Photonics Podcast
Photonics Spectra
Now
Videos
Our Summits & Conferences
Industry Events
Bookstore
Join Our Community
Subscribe
Advertise
Become a member
Sign in
Contribute a Feature
Suggest a Webinar
Submit a Press Release
Mobile Apps
About Us
Our Company
Our Publications
Editorial Advisory Board
Contact Us
Career Opportunities
Teddi C. Laurin Scholarship
Terms & Conditions
Privacy Policy
California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA)
©2026 Photonics Media
100 West St.
Pittsfield, MA, 01201 USA
info@photonics.com
We use cookies to improve user experience and analyze our website traffic as stated in our
Privacy Policy
. By using this website, you agree to the use of
cookies
unless you have disabled them.