“I always like to think that for many technological achievements that benefit humans,” Dawson says, “some organism somewhere has already developed it through some evolutionary process.”

  • Revered_Beard@lemmy.world
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    7
    ·
    10 days ago

    To be clear, it’s not that they shoot laser beams from their feathers as some sort of mating ritual or defense mechanism (which, honestly, is probably how I would have used my own laser feathers, if I had them), but that there are strikingly identical nano structures that can reflect back a little bit of laser light, under laboratory conditions:

    After staining the feathers with a common dye and pumping them with soft pulses of light, they used laboratory instruments to detect beams of yellow-green laser light that were too faint to see with the naked eye. They emerged from the feathers’ eyespots, at two distinct wavelengths.

    • MysteriousSophon21@lemmy.world
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      1
      ·
      7 days ago

      The feathers actually work as photonic crystals with regularly spaced melanin rods that create a “cavity” where light bounces back and forth until it exits as coherent laser light - nature basically invented distributed feedback lasers millons of years before we did!