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Who Needs Light Bulbs? Part II
If there is one thing that just screams "future" to me, it's lasers. Sure, they've been around since the 1960s, but come on—it's lasers! Right now, they can be found in your CD and DVD players, but a few companies are hoping to put them in your TV, as well.
The word itself is an acronym for Light Amplification by Stimulated Emission of Radiation. A typical laser starts with a tube full of a "lasing medium" that can be a solid (like a ruby), a gas, some chemicals, or even a dye. A light flashes this medium, causing some of the material's electrons to get all excited. As they return to their normal state, they release a photon, which in turn can cause some other poor electron to get excited, and the reaction continues. As these photons build up and continue to bounce around, they end up bumping into the mirrors that bracket the medium. The mirror at one end lets a little bit of the light through. This light, the laser light, is one wavelength (one color) and coherent (all the photons are marching together in the same direction). In the case of your DVD player and what will be found in TVs, the apparatus is a far simpler and less interesting semiconductor or diode laser that works in much the same way as the LEDs from "Part I" in the July issue.
But in a TV?
How
Does It Work?
The Future Is. . .Almost Now
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