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Laser discrimination by stimulated emission of a phosphorA method for discriminating sources of UV, near infrared, and far infrared laser radiation was discovered. This technology is based on the use of a single magnesium sulfide phosphor doubly doped with rare earth ions, which is thermally/optically stimulated to generate colors correlatable to the incident laser radiation. The phosphor, after initial charging by visible light, exhibits green stimulated luminescence when exposed to a near infrared source (Nd: YAG laser). On exposure to far infrared sources (CO2 laser) the phosphor emission changes to orange color. A UV laser produces both an orange red as well as green color. A device using this phosphor is useful for detecting the laser and for discriminating between the near infrared, far infrared, and UV lasers. The technology is also capable of infrared laser diode beam profiling since the radiation source leaves an imprint on the phosphor that can be photographed. Continued development of the technology offers potential for discrimination between even smaller bandwidths within the infrared spectrum, a possible aid to communication or wavemixing devices that need to rapidly identify and process optical signals.
Document ID
19920013235
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Mathur, V. K.
(Naval Surface Warfare Center Silver Spring, MD., United States)
Chakrabarti, K.
(Advanced Technology and Research, Inc., Laurel MD., United States)
Date Acquired
September 6, 2013
Publication Date
December 1, 1991
Publication Information
Publication: NASA, Washington, Technology 2001: The Second National Technology Transfer Conference and Exposition, Volume 1
Subject Category
Lasers And Masers
Accession Number
92N22478
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
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