Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Hamamatsu Photonics

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Native name
  
浜松ホトニクス株式会社

Traded as
  
TYO: 6965

Founder
  
Heihachiro Horiuchi

Number of employees
  
4,420

Type
  
Public KK

Industry
  
Electronics

Headquarters
  
Japan

Founded
  
29 September 1953

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Key people
  
Teruo Hiruma (Chairman of the board) Akira Hiruma (President and CEO)

Stock price
  
6965 (TYO) JP¥ 3,340 -5.00 (-0.15%)15 Mar, 3:00 PM GMT+9 - Disclaimer

Subsidiaries
  
Hamamatsu Photonics U K Ltd

Hamamatsu Photonics K.K. (浜松ホトニクス株式会社, Hamamatsu Hotonikusu Kabushiki-gaisha) is a Japanese manufacturer of optical sensors (including photomultiplier tubes), electric light sources, and other optical devices and their applied instruments for scientific, technical and medical use.

The company was founded in 1953 by Heihachiro Horiuchi, a former student of Kenjiro Takayanagi, who is known as "the father of Japanese television".

Hermann Simon, a leading German business author and thinker, mentioned Hamamatsu in his book titled Hidden Champions of the Twenty-First Century: The Success Strategies of Unknown World Market Leaders as an example of a "Hidden Champion".

Hamamatsu CCD image sensors are used at the Subaru Telescope of the National Astronomical Observatory of Japan.

Hamamatsu Photonics' photomultiplier tubes (PMTs) were designed specifically for the Super-Kamiokande neutrino detector facility at the University of Tokyo where 2015 Nobel Prize Laureate Takaaki Kajita conducted his research. In using products contributed by Hamamatsu Photonics, "Kajita was able to prove that neutrinos do in fact have mass -- a major shift in our fundamental understanding of how the universe works," said Tom Baer, chair of the Photonics Industry Neuroscience Group of the National Photonics Initiative. "This win is a tremendous accomplishment for Kajita and Hamamatsu Photonics."

The sensors made by the company also helped confirm the existence of the Higgs boson in research that led to the 2013 Nobel Physics prize.

References

Hamamatsu Photonics Wikipedia