Gentec-EO Launches New Fast Laser Power Detector Model

Gentec-EO Launches New Fast Laser Power Detector Model

Gentec-EO has followed up its recent launch of integrating sphere laser power detector series, with another model of fast laser power detectors, the IS50A-1KW-RSI. This detector offers an impressive typical rise time of just 0.2 second – which means you get your high-accuracy measurement extremely fast compared to any other high-power detectors available on the market.

It comes with the following advantages:

  • Measure up to 1000 W of continuous power
  • 50 mm aperture
  • 0.01 mW noise level
  • Ideal for collimated beams
  • Equally suitable for beam divergence (full angle) up to 20º

Simply plug it into a computer with an INTEGRA USB or RS-232 connector, open the free proprietary software PC Gentec-EO and you are all set to take your first measurement.

Integrating sphere power detectors offer many advantages performance-wise: fast response, high sensitivity, excellent spatial uniformity.

The same detector can be used for measuring several laser systems because the dynamic spectral range is very wide. Indeed, these detectors have a NIST-traceable calibration for their entire calibrated spectral range, and this calibration is valid from the noise floor to the maximum power: from tens of mW to 1000 W!

This results in significant savings for customers who have many lasers to measure. Also, you do not need to purchase a display device to read your measurement since our INTEGRA technology is integrated into it. Just plug the detector into your computer.

If you are particularly concerned about safety in your work environment, using an integrating sphere detector instead of a thermal detector is even safer because back-reflections are much weaker.

An integrating sphere detector is composed of two elements. First, light enters a hollow sphere through a small aperture and it diffuses inside the sphere with multiple reflections on the sphere’s inner coating. Second, a small uniformly-lit aperture at another position in the sphere samples a portion of this diffused light and sends it onto a sensor. Basically, integrating spheres act as attenuators to allow for the use of smaller and faster detectors.

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