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maser
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maser

In physics, a high-frequency microwave amplifier or oscillator in which the signal to be amplified is used to stimulate excited atoms into emitting energy at the same frequency. Atoms or molecules are raised to a higher energy level and then allowed to lose this energy by radiation emitted at a precise frequency. The principle has been extended to other parts of the electromagnetic spectrum as, for example, in the laser.

The two-level ammonia-gas maser was first suggested in 1954 by US physicist Charles Townes at Columbia University, New York, and independently the same year by Nikolai Basov and Aleksandr Prokhorov in Russia. The solid-state three-level maser, the most sensitive amplifier known, was envisaged by Nicolaas Bloembergen at Harvard in 1956. The ammonia maser is used as a frequency standard oscillator (see clock), and the three-level maser as a receiver for satellite communications and radio astronomy.



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