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Dyed Peacock Feathers Function as First Animal Biolaser Cavity

This breakthrough raises questions about the resonating nanostructures responsible for lasing, pointing to potential applications in advanced materials.

Overview

  • Researchers confirmed that multiple dye-staining cycles convert peacock eyespots into optical cavities capable of emitting coherent laser light.
  • The study marks the first documented example of a biolaser cavity in the animal kingdom.
  • Under pulsed 532 nm excitation, dye-infused barbules produce narrow, highly conserved green and yellow-green laser emissions from several eyespot regions.
  • Investigators have yet to identify the precise nanostructures driving the resonant feedback, with protein granules and photonic crystal elements under consideration.
  • Findings may inform the development of bio-inspired photonic coatings, anti-counterfeiting features and novel biological sensors.