Young Company, Long History
HRL Laboratories continues the legacy of technology advances that began at Hughes Research Laboratories, established by Howard Hughes in 1948. HRL Laboratories, LLC, was organized as a limited liability company (LLC) on December 17, 1997, and received its first patent on September 12, 2000. With more than 500 patents to our name since then and counting, we're proud of our talented group of researchers, who continue the long tradition of technical excellence in innovation.
First Laser
One of Hughes' most notable achievements came in 1960 with the demonstration of the
world's first laser which used a synthetic ruby crystal. The ruby laser became the basis of a multibillion-dollar
laser range finder business for Hughes.
First Self-Aligned Gate MOSFET (SAGFET)
Attracting little fanfare at the time, a seminal invention developed at Hughes was
the ion-implanted, self-aligned gate metal-oxide semiconductor (MOS) field effect transistor, or SAGFET. Conceived
by inventor Robert Bower in 1965, the device became the basis for all modern integrated circuits and has been
described by the National Inventor's Hall of Fame as "the most replicated manmade structure in the history
of mankind."
First Liquid Crystal Light Valve (LCLV) For Large Screen Displays
The first LCLV imaging for large screen displays was demonstrated in 1969. It has
been applied to graphics projectors in commercial businesses and in large screen displays for military command
and control. Today, HRL is leveraging knowledge in photonics, RF technology, and signal processing to create discriminators
for future defense systems and commercial applications.
A Leader in Integrated Circuits
Custom optical fibers and integrated optical circuits pioneered at Hughes Research
Labs in the early 1970s resulted in the development of high-speed integrated optical modulators, detectors and
switches. We continue to pioneer new generations of circuitry, including the world's first W-Band MMIC and a world-record
IC speed (150 GHz).
Pioneer in Ion Propulsion
Unique in its longevity as a development area, ion propulsion research continued
at Hughes Research Labs from 1961 until it was transitioned in its prototype stage more than 30 years later. An
ion propulsion engine was successfully launched on a satellite in 1997.
Artificial Intelligence
In 1984, Hughes Labs' Artificial Intelligence Center generated software for the Defense
Advanced Research Projects Agency's Autonomous Land Vehicle, which demonstrated the world's first autonomous navigation
of cross-country terrain. HRL remains a leader in robust computing and communications. Today, researchers are
exploring new paradigms for developing complex, intelligent systems for computing, object detection, communications
and networking.
About US
Celebrating 50 Years
of Laser Technology
It
was one of a number of
firsts that came out
of the laboratories at
HRL, formerly Hughes
Research Laboratories.
While a number of labs
around the country were
attempting to build a
working laser, Hughes
researcher Dr. Theodore
Maiman and colleagues
proved the laser concept
could indeed work. More>
