Team Builds 'Anti-Laser'

Device can absorb any laser beam
By Rob Quinn,  Newser Staff
Posted Feb 18, 2011 4:05 AM CST
Team Builds 'Anti-Laser'
Lasers function by amplifying light, anti-lasers absorb it.   (AP Photo/Institute of Cetacean Research)

Yale University scientists have created the world's first anti-laser, a device capable of completely absorbing any laser beam. The device functions in the opposite way that a laser does: It traps light beams and forces them to bounce around until their energy is dissipated, the BBC reports. Its creators believe it could be used for optical switches in next-generation computers—but not as a defense against laser weapons. "The energy gets dissipated as heat. So if someone sets a laser on you with enough power to fry you, the anti-laser won't stop you from frying," the lead researcher explains. (More laser stories.)

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