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NEWSLETTER | 2022 | Issue No. 2
FEATURED CONTENTS:
Spectroscopy | See what's new | Webinars | Product highlight | New products |
 Ask an engineer | Events

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Spectroscopy
Video
How spectrometers have downsized & new options for pocket spectroscopy
Spectroscopy is a universal tool, finding uses in commercial applications, precision analysis, and even forensic studies. Watch this video to see how we took large systems and, through our decades-long expertise in sensor design and nanotechnology, developed highly reliable and very sensitive spectrometers small enough to rest on a fingertip.

See spectrometers
See image sensors for spectrometers
Applications
Analytical equipment
See products for these applications:
  • FTIR spectroscopy
  • IR spectroscopy
  • Mass spectrometry
  • Raman spectroscopy
  • THz spectroscopy
  • Water quality inspection
See what's new
Product previews
We didn’t exhibit at Photonics West this year due to the surge in COVID-19 cases, but we’d like to share with you some of our new and upcoming products you would have seen at the show. 

Visit our Photonics West 2022 virtual booth
Webinars
Hamamatsu Frontier Series: Quantum & Biological Sciences (Part 1)
Quantum biology: How nature might be optimized to harness quantum mechanics
February 24 at 1 PM EST
Hamamatsu Frontier Series: Quantum & Biological Sciences (Part 2)
Quantum sensing: Probing biological systems in a new light 
March 24 at 1 PM EST
Hamamatsu Frontier Series: Quantum & Biological Sciences (Part 3)
Transforming bioimaging with quantum light microscopy 
April 13 at 4 PM EST
Product highlight
Mini-spectrometer SMD series
C14384MA-01

About the size of a small coin, this tiny grating-based spectrometer is ideal for pocket (consumer) spectrometers and handheld instruments. It has a spectral response range of 640-1050 nm and resolution of 17-20 nm (depending on the wavelength). Its input slit is 15 x 300 µm, and incoming light is dispersed by a nano-imprinted reflective grating and imaged onto a custom CMOS active pixel sensor (APS). 
New products
Low light detection
MPPC (SiPM) driver circuit
C14191
Low light detection
PMT assembly
H15547-07
Distance measurement
MPPC (SiPM) for LiDAR
S15639-1325PS
Spectroscopy
CCD linear image sensor
S15257-2048
IR measurement
Balanced detector
C12668-05
Si PIN photodiode
S16392-01CT
InGaAs PIN photodiode
G15553-003C
Wavefront shaper
C16353 series
X-ray TDI camera
C12300-121
Immuno-chromato Reader (lateral flow reader)
C10066 series
Ask an engineer
Dino Butron is an Applications Engineer, specializing in all of our point detectors and signal-to-noise simulations. He and his photonic sidekick (his cat Bash) tackle technical issues daily.
Q: What is excess noise in APDs?

A: Excess noise is the additional noise created by a detector with gain. A detector with excess noise of 1 means that the intrinsic noise is multiplied by 1—therefore, the noise is not made any worse—but any value over 1 means…Read more
See more Q&As:
  • APDs have a specification called excess noise figure. What does it mean?
  • What is the typical excess noise of Si APDs?
  • Why does the excess noise change depending on the wavelength?
Events
APS March Meeting | March 14-18 | Chicago, IL | Booth 301
USCAP Annual Meeting | March 19-24 | Los Angeles, CA | Booth 810
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photonics@hamamatsu.com
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