Recent progress in chromium and iron doped II-VI semiconductor materials makes them the laser sources of choice when one needs a compact system with tunability over 1.9-5.1 μm. Output powers exceeding 10 W and efficiency up to 70% were demonstrated in several Cr doped semiconductors. The unique combination of technological (low-cost ceramic material) and spectroscopic characteristics makes these materials ideal candidates for mid-IR tunable laser systems. This article reviews transition metal doped II-VI materials and recent progress in Cr-and Fe-doped solid-state mid-IR lasers.Critical areas driving future progress in Cr-and Fe-doped chalcogenide middle infrared lasers: fabrication of binary and ternary II-VI ceramic gain media with low phonon cut-off, low optical losses and high design flexibility; high performance laser design with improved characteristics in power (power scaling to dozens of Watts), spectral (spectral coverage over 1.8-6 μm), temporal (frequency comb generation), and pump domains (electrically pumped Cr-and Fe-doped II-VI quantum confined structures).
Collared lemmings (Dicrostonyx) demonstrate extensive chromosome variation along their circumpolar distribution in the high Arctic. To reveal the history of this genus and the origin of chromosome races in the Palearctic, we studied the geographical pattern of mtDNA variation in lemmings from 13 localities by using eight tetranucleotide restriction enzymes. The main split in mtDNA phylogeny is at the Bering Strait and corresponds to the main chromosome division between the Beringian and the Eurasian groups of karyotypes. Nucleotide divergence estimate of 6.8% suggests that, despite the Bering Land Bridge, Palearctic and Nearctic forms have been separated since the mid‐Pleistocene. Five distinct phylogenetic groups of mtDNA haplotypes, with average divergence of 1.5%, corresponding to geographical regions, were found along the Palearctic coast. Low nucleotide and haplotype diversity and a star‐like phylogeny within phylogeographical groups of haplotypes suggest regional bottleneck events in the recent past, most probably due to warming events during the Holocene. There is congruence between phylogeographical pattern of mtDNA variation and geographical distribution of chromosome races; 69% of the total mtDNA variation is allocated among chromosome races. This congruence implies that historical events such as fragmentation and allopatric bottleneck events have been important for the origin of chromosome races. However, historical factors do not explain the fixed autosome fusions found to distinguish certain populations.
Efficient continuous-wave (cw) lasing of Cr(2+):ZnS and Cr(2+):ZnSe crystals in external hemispherical cavities and in a microchip configuration under Er-fiber-laser pumping at room temperature are reported. The key result is what is believed to be the first successful demonstration of cw Cr(2+):ZnS and Cr(2+):ZnSe microchip lasers with maximum output powers of 63 and 100 mW at 2320 and 2520 nm, with slope efficiencies of 53% and 20%, respectively.
We report the development of a continuous-wave, room-temperature Cr(2+) ZnS laser that is compact and tunable over 700 nm. The laser is pumped by a diode-pumped Er-fiber laser and generates 0.7 W of linearly polarized radiation at 2.35microm , at up to 40% slope efficiency. Cr(2+) ZnS directly diode-pumped at 1.6microm yields polarized radiation that is tunable over 400 nm at up to 25 mW of output power. A comparison of Cr(2+) ZnS with Cr ZnSe (70 mW, 350 nm) in a similar setup is given. As opposed to Cr ZnSe, the Cr ZnS laser is intrinsically polarized. Finally, we observe sensitization of the output radiation by a few milliwatts of the visible (470-500-nm) and near-infrared (740-770-nm) radiation.
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