MASER is an acronym for Microwave Amplification by Stimulation Emission of Radiation. It is a device that produces coherent electromagnetic waves through amplification by stimulated emission. Coherent waves are two or more waves that generate waves at the same time, having the same frequency, amplitude, and phase.
During the development of the MASER, it was found that masers emit EM waves which are in the microwave and radio frequencies across a broader band of the electromagnetic spectrum. To maintain the accuracy of the acronym, it was suggested that the letter "M" stand for molecular rather than microwave.
A LASER is a type of MASER that works with photons at a higher frequency in the ultraviolet or visible light spectrum. In 1957, with the development of the optical coherent oscillator, the LASER was first called an optical maser. It eventually was called a LASER (Light Amplification by Stimulated Emission of Radiation), the name coined by Gordon Gould in 1957.
It was Albert Einstein who proposed the principle of stimulated emission in which the MASER was based. Einstein proposed that when atoms are induced into an excited energy state, these can amplify radiation at the proper frequency. By putting such an amplifying medium in a resonant cavity, feedback is created that can produce coherent radiation.
MASER power comes out of the cold
Scientists demonstrate, for the time, a solid-state "MASER" capable of operating at room temperature, paving the way for its widespread adoption – as reported today in the journal Nature.
MASER stands for Microwave Amplification by Stimulated Emission of Radiation. Devices based on this process (and known by the same acronym) were developed by scientists more than 50 years ago, before the first LASERs were invented. Instead of creating intense beams of light, as in the case of LASERs, MASERs deliver a concentrated beam of microwaves.
Conventional MASER technology works by amplifying microwaves using hard inorganic crystals such as ruby, this process is known as "masing". However, the MASER has had little technological impact compared to the LASER because getting it to work has always required extreme conditions that are difficult to produce; either extremely low pressures, supplied by special vacuum chambers and pumps, or freezing conditions at temperatures close to absolute zero ( -273.15°C), supplied by special refrigerators. To make matters worse, the application of strong magnetic fields has often also been necessary, requiring large magnets.
Now, the team from the National Physical Laboratory (NPL) and Imperial College London have demonstrated masing in a solid-state device working in air at room temperature with no applied magnetic field. Today's breakthrough means that the cost to manufacture and operate MASERs could be dramatically reduced, which could lead to them becoming as widely used as LASER technology.
The researchers suggest that room-temperature MASERs could be used to make more sensitive medical instruments for scanning patients, improved chemical sensors for remotely detecting explosives; lower-noise read-out mechanisms for quantum computers and better radio telescopes for potentially detecting life on other planets.