Is LEP Coherent Laser Light?
The blue laser is fully converted by a phosphor material into broadband white light.
The emitted light is non-coherent white light, similar to LED emission.
The light source used in many tactical long-range lights, stage lamps, and defence systems is based on Laser Excited Phosphor (LEP) technology. Inside the sealed light engine, a blue laser diode is used only as an excitation source. The blue laser light is directed onto a phosphor material (phosphor ceramic or coating).
When the phosphor is excited by the blue laser, it emits broadband visible light through a photoluminescence process. During this conversion process, the coherent properties of the original laser light are lost.
The light emitted from the phosphor is therefore broad-spectrum, non-coherent white light, similar to light produced by LEDs or other phosphor-converted lighting technologies.
Optical design
-
Transmissive design
-
Reflective design
Key Points
• The laser exists only inside the sealed light engine as an excitation source.
• The emitted light from the front of the device is non-coherent white light, not a direct laser beam.
• The narrow beam appearance is caused by the optical system and small source size, not by coherent laser emission.
• LEP technology is widely used in high-intensity flashlights, projection systems, and searchlights.
Spectrum
-
Normalized Spectrum
LEP has passed the IEC-60825 CLASS 1 safety test.
Please take precautions to not hit anyone in the eye whenever you use them.