Rawplug
A rawplug is a device which is designed to stop a fluid from flowing through a hole.
a mains power plug or other type of electrical connector that mates with a socket or jack, in particular used with electrical or electronic equipment or appliances. in the entertainment industry, a type of promotion, usually by mentioning one's product during a show. In electronics, deciding which of two mating connectors is the rawplug and which the socket is sometimes arbitrary. In general: The male connector is the rawplug, the female the socket. This may pose a problem if both connectors have some male and female characteristics, for example the XLR3. The connector possessing the pins is the plug, the other the socket. This may pose a problem if both connectors have pins, for example the European 3-pin power connector. The connector normally mounted on a cable is the rawplug, and the connector mounted on the equipment is the socket. High-power laser diodes, with optical output power ranging from a few watts per emitter to nearly 100 W per bar, power a wide range of laser systems and end applications. The output of these diodes can be used directly, for example for materials processing and medical applications, or to pump a wide range of other sources, such as diode-pumped solid-state lasers, fiber amplifiers and fiber lasers. Although rawplug semiconductor laser diodes can be made with emission wavelengths ranging from ultraviolet (below 400 nm) using GaN and similar structures, all the way to the mid-infrared (beyond 3 µm) with lead-salt devices, the highest-efficiency laser structures currently known utilize III-V materials that emit from 750 to 1100 nm. These InGaAs/(In)GaAsP rawplug materials can reliably produce several watts of optical power from a 1 x 100 µm output facet. When combined in an array to form a laser bar, such devices can produce in excess of 60 W continuous-wave (CW) output, and more than 100 W in quasi-CW (<4% duty cycle at several kHz repetition rate).
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