On Sat, Apr 02, 2016 at 06:35:44PM -0700, Keith Lofstrom wrote:
> >> MASER power comes out of the cold: Researchers demo solid-state MASER capable of operating
> >> at room temperatures
A 2015 paper is open access:
Enhanced magnetic Purcell effect in room-temperature masers
http://www.nature.com/ncomms/2015/150220/ncomms7215/pdf/ncomms7215.pdf
Pg 2: ... optically pumped with a xenon flash lamp
delivering peak optical power of 70 W. ...
Pg 3: ... a strong maser burst of microwave power was
observed 20μs after the onset of the optical
pulse with a peak power of 6μW (22.2dBm) ...
Pg 4: Fig. 3 graphs the measured input and output pulses.
The optical pulse is about 6x wider than the 1.45 GHz
microwave pulse. Efficiency approximately 14e-9 .
Again, what's nifty about this work is that they've used
clever solid state materials to make a microwave maser
work at room temperature, very difficult. They will
learn things about materials that could lead to far
more efficient systems ... but not soon.
BTW, tomorrow I will attend a Portland State physics
lecture by a Lawrence Berkeley Lab researcher working
on direct bandgap lead halide perskovite solar cells;
overall efficiency 20%, but some individual grains
show 30%. Cheap common materials; I'll ask about
radiation sensitivity. My friend John Freeouf is
physics department chair, and worked on super radhard
graded junction indium phosphide cells.