In this illustration of a terahertz pulse, light emerges from small sheet of metallic foil. (Image by Greg Stewart) http://www.nanowerk.com/news/newsid=23334.php (Nanowerk News) Using leftover high-speed electrons from SLAC's Linac Coherent Light Source, researchers have successfully generated intense pulses of light in a largely untapped part of the electromagnetic spectrum – the so-called terahertz gap. | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Terahertz pulses – T-rays, for short – get their name from their frequency, which is 1 to 10 trillion cycles per second. Falling between visible frequencies and microwaves on the electromagnetic spectrum, terahertz waves are being used in new sensing technologies and biological imaging techniques that cause minimal radiation damage to samples. | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Other potential uses include chemical and biological materials identification, photonic devices, microelectronics characterization and biomedical imaging. Until now, however, the quest to develop many of these applications has been frustrated by an inability to produce terahertz light that's bright enough. | ||||||||||||||||||||||
A team led by SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory's Aaron Lindenberg reported success in a paper published Oct. 7 in Applied Physics Letters ("Single-cycle terahertz pulses with >0.2 V/Â field amplitudes via coherent transition radiation")
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Tuesday, November 8, 2011
New life for old electrons in biological imaging, sensing technologies
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