High-precision lasers are obtained from soap bubbles

This reveals the potential of everyday materials for scientific use.

Researchers in Slovenia have transformed an everyday item - soap bubbles - into ultrasensitive laser sensors, revealing their unexpected potential for advanced detection devices. By integrating fluorescent dye and specialized optics, bubble structures enable customizable laser beams responding to subtle environmental changes.

Experts at the University of Ljubliana developed bubble lasers using widely-accessible soap mixtures, not complex chemicals. The team excited incorporated dye molecules with an external light source as the microscopic curved bubble interfaces reflected and intensified the emission.

This creates an optical cavity similar to those in conventional lasers but based entirely on a nanoscale air-water interface displaying unique geometry and fluidity. Even slight distortions from pressure, temperature or static fields alter the laser properties, making possible highly precise measurement.

Reinforcing bubbles with liquid crystals improved structural stability for sustained lasing, while enhancing sensitivity. The researchers state that their platform can sense extraordinarily minute pressure shifts - down to 0.001% of atmospheric levels.

The flexibility to design bubble lasers using affordable, safe materials provides opportunities for innovation in optical devices and detectors. Lead author Matjaž Humar notes most any bubble can generate a laser beam visible to the naked eye.

Their research taps interdisciplinary knowledge from soap physics to optics and material science - proving everyday materials still hold fertile ground for discovery. Something as common as a soap bubble may fuel technology enabling scientists to probe unseen realms.

"They creatively combined microlaser concepts with an entirely new platform," summarizes physicist Miguel Bandres, opening doors to applications from sensors to spectroscopes, art and more based on such deceptively simple ideas.

By reconsidering the potential all around us, from bubbles to beads, paperclips and beyond, who knows what inspiring interplay or insight could take shape to drive the next wave of innovation?

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