Books & Arts |
Featured
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Books & Arts |
New titles at a glance
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News & Views |
Flat optics excels
Metasurfaces, two-dimensional versions of metamaterials, look poised to replace their three-dimensional counterparts in many applications.
- Rachel Won
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Editorial |
Fantastic plastic
Flexible and stretchable solar cells and light-emitting diodes are respectively perceived as being next-generation photovoltaic and lighting technologies, and are attracting the attention of the general public.
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Editorial |
Truth and transparency
To promote transparency and honesty, it is important for corresponding authors to divulge any financial interests that may affect how their articles are perceived.
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Editorial |
Transcending limitations
Obtaining new insights into yet unexplained phenomena and making the impossible possible are among the main motivations for any scientist. Going beyond limitations is the key challenge.
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Commentary |
Fraunhofer research model comes to the UK
The opening of the Fraunhofer Centre for Applied Photonics in Glasgow will provide valuable and much-needed support for the photonics industry in the UK.
- Oliver Graydon
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Editorial |
Portals of discovery
Assumptions, educated guesses and intuition are often unavoidably involved in the study of new phenomena, and scientists may therefore make mistakes at the outset. However, this is part of the research process and sometimes brilliant mistakes can lead to unexpected discoveries.
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Interview |
Alumina aplenty
Brillouin scattering threatens to limit continued power-scaling for many fibre applications, but sapphire-derived all-glass fibres with large concentrations of alumina may help to eliminate this problem. Nature Photonics spoke to Peter Dragic and John Ballato to learn more.
- David Pile
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Interview |
And then there were two
Researchers around the world now have access to a second hard-X-ray free-electron laser facility: the SPring-8 Angstrom Compact Free-Electron Laser in Japan. Nature Photonics spoke to Makina Yabashi and Hitoshi Tanaka from the facility about their achievements and plans for the future.
- David Pile
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Interview |
A new twist for communications
Twisted light beams with different values of orbital angular momentum can be used to provide dramatic increases in the capacity of free-space optical communications. Nature Photonics spoke to Alan Willner at the University of Southern California to find out more.
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Editorial |
Contributors, guests and ghosts
Why do we need statements to define the contributions made by each author? Does this practice help or hinder scientists, and which demographic is most affected?
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Interview |
Energy shifting
Nature Photonics spoke to Kim Ta Phuoc about an extremely bright and compact X-ray and gamma-ray source that exploits laser plasma acceleration and Compton scattering simultaneously.
- David Pile
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News & Views |
Science in the sand
The King Abdullah University of Science and Technology was established in Saudi Arabia in 2009. Nature Photonics recently visited the campus to see how things are shaping up.
- Noriaki Horiuchi
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Editorial |
Thriving in your career
Being open and adaptable to change can help you succeed in your career of choice.
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Interview |
Conductors for optics
New research suggests that graphene is not a 'miracle material' for metamaterials and plasmonics. Nature Photonics spoke to Philippe Tassin about what makes a good conductor for these applications.
- David Pile
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Interview |
A happy catastrophe
The application of catastrophe theory to high-harmonic generation is creating opportunities for optimizing the spectral intensity of extreme-ultraviolet light and characterizing attosecond pulses, explains Oren Raz from the Weizmann Institute of Science in Israel.
- Oliver Graydon
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Interview |
Towards highly efficient solar cells
Suntech Power is the world's largest producer of solar panels and has delivered more than 20 million photovoltaic panels to more than 80 countries around the globe. Nature Photonics spoke with Stuart Wenham, chief technology officer at Suntech Power, to find out more about its activities and visions.
- Noriaki Horiuchi
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Interview |
Crystal clear
A semiconductor is usually opaque to any light whose photon energy is larger than the semiconductor bandgap. Nature Photonics spoke to Stephen Durbin about how to render GaAs semiconductor crystals transparent using intense X-ray pulses.
- David Pile
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Interview |
GaN-on-glass success
The successful growth of GaN-based LEDs on amorphous glass avoids the size and cost limitations of a sapphire substrate, says Jun Hee Choi from the Samsung Advanced Institute of Technology in South Korea.
- Noriaki Horiuchi
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Interview |
Breaking free
Luminescent solar concentrators have long been hampered by reabsorption losses. Nature Photonics spoke to Noel Giebink about how to circumvent this effect.
- David Pile
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Interview |
An interdisciplinary approach
Optofluidics brings together light and liquids to provide technologies such as fluid waveguides, deformable lenses and microdroplet lasers. Nature Photonics spoke to Frances Ligler about the origins of the field and where it might be heading.
- David Pile
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Interview |
Controlling quantum flow
Achieving dynamic optical control of exciton polariton quantum flow could provide a deeper understanding of quantum behaviour and inspire new types of device, says Daniele Sanvitto from the Istituto Nanoscienze in Italy.
- Noriaki Horiuchi
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Commentary |
Japan post-earthquake
Scientists in Japan struggled in the aftermath of a catastrophic earthquake, radiation problems and power cuts. Nevertheless, they have now largely recovered from the desperate situation.
- Noriaki Horiuchi
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Interview |
Optical attraction
Optically pulling a particle towards a light source may be counterintuitive, but it is not impossible. Jack Ng tells Nature Photonics how this force can be achieved.
- Rachel Won
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Interview |
The promise of chalcogenides
Chalcogenide glasses are attracting significant attention thanks to their mid-infrared transparency and highly nonlinear properties. Nadya Anscombe talks to Dan Hewak from the University of Southampton in the UK.
- Nadya Anscombe
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Editorial |
All about review
Peer review is arguably the most important process a paper must pass through on its journey to being published in a journal.
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Interview |
Controlling superconductivity
The use of intense ultrafast terahertz pulses to gate superconductivity not only provides insights into charge transport in such materials but may also lead to new forms of data switching, explains Andrea Cavalleri.
- Noriaki Horiuchi
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Interview |
Cellular lasers
Researchers have now shown that lasers — usually thought of as being inanimate optoelectronic instruments — can also be made from certain biological gain media. Nature Photonics spoke to Malte C. Gather and Seok Hyun Yun about their realization of a living single-cell laser.
- David Pile
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Interview |
How it all began
Since the first discovery of optical gradient and scattering forces in 1970, optical tweezers have helped unveil many mysteries and given deeper insights in many areas of science. Arthur Ashkin, the father of optical tweezers, recalls some 'eureka' moments and shares his viewpoint of the field with Nature Photonics.
- Rachel Won
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Interview |
Single-laser high-volume transmission
Researchers in Europe have demonstrated that an optical fast Fourier transformation technique can be used to efficiently encode and decode information at rates of terabits per second in a single laser source.
- Rachel Won
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Editorial |
Online commenting
Would you welcome or loathe the ability to post online comments on articles published in Nature Photonics?
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Interview |
Getting a clearer picture
Adaptive optics has a huge range of applications. Nadya Anscombe talks to Robert Tyson, associate professor at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte in the USA, to find out his views on its future.
- Nadya Anscombe
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News & Views |
Smaller is better
Miniature lasers with dimensions approaching the nanoscale could provide the ultimate integrated source of bright and coherent light if losses can be overcome and electrical pumping made efficient.
- David Pile
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News & Views |
Photovoltaic outlook
Solar cells are poised to play an important role in the development of a clean-energy economy, but their future success depends both on supportive government policies and research efforts to improve conversion efficiencies and bring down costs.
- Rachel Won
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Profile |
Emergence of the e-book
Electronic books have really begun to take off in the past few years. Siân Harris finds out about a display company that has helped this to happen.
- Siân Harris
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News & Views |
Talking optics in Nagasaki
Research on solar cells, optical frequency combs, high-power laser diodes and brain monitoring were all topics of discussion at the autumn meeting of the Japan Society of Applied Physics in Nagasaki this September.
- Noriaki Horiuchi
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News & Views |
Optics and chemistry meet
Research into photochemical reactions is now yielding promising ways of converting solar energy into convenient forms of chemical energy that can be easily stored.
- David Pile
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Editorial |
Understanding artwork
Given that an article can't be published until any artwork issues are resolved, it makes sense to get it right first time and avoid delays.
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Editorial |
Get in touch
Do you have a strong opinion or comment that you think would be valuable to share with the optics community? Then why not make use of our correspondence section.
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News & Views |
Champion innovations
Europe has always been a hub of innovation for photonics, and this year's Photonics Europe conference has shown that young inventors are still coming up with great ideas for commercialization.
- Rachel Won
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News & Views |
OPCPA boosts high-field physics
Optical parametric chirped pulse amplification is a promising approach for amplifying few-cycle laser pulses to unprecedented powers. However, the future success of the scheme depends on the availability of suitable pump sources.
- Rachel Won
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Editorial |
Embracing mobility
An iPhone application for browsing nature.com content may change the way we access research news.
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Editorial |
A paperless era?
The recent explosion of e-readers onto the market, along with the news that Amazon is now selling more e-books than physical copies, suggests that our reading habits are finally changing.
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Profile |
Direct laser writing
Start-up company Nanoscribe has developed table-top systems that can write intricate 3D structures not possible through other lithographic technologies. Nadya Anscombe finds out how the company was founded and what its plans are for the future.
- Nadya Anscombe