Seeing the invisible!


Seeing the invisible!
NKT Photonics will build lasers that can see in the infrared spectrum and thus
give images of the hitherto unknown and unseen 

Birkerød, Denmark, June, 2009 - 
Imagine that you could detect gases far in the distance or detect fat content
in real-time on the spot instead of going through the tedious process by first
taking a sample out and then placing it under a microscope in a remote lab.
With this new laser one can basically analyze matter “on-the-fly” rather than
waiting for complicated, time-consuming analysis that are off-line. 
The infra-red spectrum cannot be seen with the eye but this area of frequencies
contains a lot of valuable information if one could only detect it. Light is
increasingly playing a crucial role in diagnosing and monitoring today's major
environmental and health issues. The cells that make up a virus or a source of
an impurity in food, all have a quite distinctive fingerprint that can be read
uniquely by the infra-red light which a sample absorbs. 
The availability of light sources in the mid-IR are very limited and there is a
demand for broadband, high power fibre delivered sources in applications such
as hyperspectral imaging, atmospheric sensing, pharmaceutical process analysis
and defence. 

A new European project aims to fill the void with supercontinuum based
technology. NKT Photonics is to develop and commercialise supercontinuum
sources that extend to the infra-red spectrum. The project will run over a
period of three years, involve a specially chosen consortium and have a total
budget of 4 million Euros, of which 2 million Euros has been awarded from the
Danish National Advanced Technology Foundation. 

Already, NKT Photonics has successfully developed visible supercontinuum
sources as a commercial product and this technology platform will be taken to a
new level with advanced crystal fiber technology to provide mid-IR light. 
The project is guided by high profile industrial companies, who have a keen
interest in employing the end product of the project into their mid-IR
applications. “ it is clear from these industrial companies that there is a
technological gap that this project will fill”, says CEO Jakob Skov, NKT
Photonics. 

More information about the new research project can be obtained by contacting:
CEO Jakob D. Skov - jds@nktphotonics.com  + 45 21206401