History & Comments
Back
Initial version
Description:Co-evolution of Science & Technology graph
# [TECH] Laser (Device) ⏎ **The Laser** (Light Amplification by Stimulated Emission of Radiation) is a device producing coherent, monochromatic, collimated light, with applications spanning communications, manufacturing, medicine, and precision measurement. ⏎ ## Overview ⏎ Theodore Maiman's first ruby laser (1960) was quickly followed by helium-neon (1960), semiconductor (1962), CO₂ (1964), and dye lasers. By the 1980s, semiconductor diode lasers enabled CD players, optical fiber communications, laser printers, and barcode scanners. High-power lasers cut and weld steel. Ultrashort pulse lasers (femtosecond) enable eye surgery (LASIK), multiphoton microscopy, and attosecond physics. Laser interferometry at LIGO detects gravitational waves. ⏎ ## Key Actors ⏎ - **Companies**: Hughes Aircraft (first laser), Bell Labs, Coherent Inc. (1966), II-VI (now Coherent), IPG Photonics, JDSU, Lumentum - **Inventors**: Theodore Maiman (1927–2007), Nick Holonyak Jr. (diode laser, 1962) ⏎ ## Key Patents ⏎ - Schawlow, A. & Townes, C. US Patent 2,929,922 (1960) — laser (optical maser) - Hall, R.N. US Patent 3,245,002 (1966) — semiconductor laser ⏎ ## Economic Value ⏎ Global laser market: **$19 billion/year** (2023, Strategies Unlimited). Industrial laser applications (cutting, welding): $5B. Medical lasers: $3B. Laser communications (optical fiber): enables $30B+ infrastructure. Consumer (barcode, DVD, laser pointers): $3B. ⏎ ## Notes ⏎ Strategies Unlimited *Annual Laser Market Review* 2023. Optical fiber communications, enabled by semiconductor lasers, supports the internet — value $11T+/year. Medical laser vision correction (LASIK) alone: 9M procedures/year, $3B market. ⏎ # Parents ⏎ * [SCI] Laser Physics & Stimulated Emission⏎
Sign in to add a new comment