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A Laser Cavity Close to the Size of the Diffraction Limit

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Researchers in Japan have developed a laser that operates at room temperature and measures only about 9 × 15 μm. Toshihiko Baba and his colleagues Kengo Nozaki and Shota Kita at Yokohama National University constructed the device by drilling an array of holes in a slab of gallium indium arsenide phosphate using electron beam lithography. The wafer had a photoluminescence peak of 1.55 μm. Unlike with typical quantum-well wafers fabricated in this manner, the investigators offset two of the holes near the center of the slab (see figure). With this intentional “defect,” the array...Read full article

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    Published: July 2007
    As We Go To PressBreaking NewsCommunicationscontinuous wave lasersgallium indium arsenide phosphateindustrialPresstime BulletinWafersLasers

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