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The Maser—New Type of Microwave Amplifier, Frequency Standard, and Spectrometer

J. P. Gordon, H. J. Zeiger, and C. H. Townes
Phys. Rev. 99, 1264 – Published 15 August 1955
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Abstract

A type of device is described which can be used as a microwave amplifier, spectrometer, or oscillator. Experimental results are given. When operated as a spectrometer, the device has good sensitivity, and, by eliminating the usual Doppler broadening, a resolution of 7 kc/sec has been achieved. Operated as an oscillator, the device produced a frequency stable to at least 4 parts in 1012 in times of the order of a second, and stable over periods of an hour or more to at least a part in 1010. The device is examined theoretically, and results are given for the expected sensitivity of the spectrometer, the stability and purity of the oscillation, and the noise figure of the amplifier. Under certain conditions a noise figure approaching the theoretical limit of unity, along with reasonably high gain, should be attainable.

  • Received 4 May 1955

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRev.99.1264

©1955 American Physical Society

Authors & Affiliations

J. P. Gordon*, H. J. Zeiger, and C. H. Townes

  • Columbia University, New York, New York

  • *Now at the Bell Telephone Laboratories, Inc., Murray Hill, New Jersey.
  • Carbide and Carbon Postdoctoral Fellow in Physics, now at Project Lincoln, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts.

See Also

Invention of the Maser and Laser

David Lindley
Phys. Rev. Focus 15, 4 (2005)

References

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Issue

Vol. 99, Iss. 4 — August 1955

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