Celebrating the laser

Introducing the special section on lasers

Celebrating the Laser | Credit: Society for Science & the Public

Read features from the special edition
The past/present/future of lasers. | Go

View interactive material on lasers
Laser History; laser uses | Go

Read past Science News coverage
Classic articles on lasers | Go

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Half a century ago, science took a step into science fiction when Theodore Maiman demonstrated that a method for making sharp beams of microwave radiation could be adapted to visible light. Those microwaves had been amplified by stimulated emission of the radiation, inspiring the acronym “maser.” Maiman showed how to do the same thing with optical radiation — visible light — hence the obvious parallel label of “laser” (although the Science News Letter cover story from July 23, 1960, referred to the “optical maser”).