Mechanooptical conversion

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Photonic steampunk

One idea would be to have a dead end of an optical fiber and
pass by with an attachment chain (over some stretch of the fiber) electronically excited material
in such a way that the dragging by catalyses a radiation emitting electronic de-excitation.
(This could probably be combined with laser like stimulated emission.) At an other location along the attachment chain the material is electronically re-excited.
Electronically re-excited either by:

  • mechanical means (like applying very high pressure) or
  • electronic means or
  • in any other suitable way.

Note that this approach with a chain only makes sense if in-place-re-excitation is a bottleneck.
(Kinda hope so, transporting metastable electronic excitations on an nanoscale attachment chain sounds kinda cool. Like photonic steampunk)

Long enough phosphorescent decay time needed:
The phosphorescent transition will need to have a long enough decay time to be mechanically transportable

  • from excitation-site
  • to (catalyzed) de-excitation-site.

Maybe with advanced atomically precise manufacturing capabilities
(and fine tunable unusually large intermolecular forces)
a lot bigger range of phosphorescent systems will be acessible/developable.
(TODO: Investigate design of phosphorescent centers assuming advanced gem-gum technology is available.)

Machine phase preventing photo-bleaching:
Having the photoactive molecules in machine phase may make it possible to avoid "photobleaching" (photoactive molecules taking damage) entirely.

Radio wave generation by mechanically rotating dipoles

(wiki-TODO: Discuss this.)

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