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laser
:For alternative meanings see laser (disambiguation).
Usaf-laser.jpg
Operation
A
laser (
light amplification by stimulated emission of radiation) is a device which uses a
quantum mechanical effect,
stimulated emission, to generate a
coherent beam of light from a lasing medium of controlled purity, size, and shape. The output of a laser may be a continuous, constant-amplitude output (known as
CW or
continuous wave), or pulsed, by using the techniques of
Q-switching,
modelocking, or
gain-switching. In pulsed operation, much higher peak powers can be achieved. A laser medium can also function as an
optical amplifier when
seeded with light from another source. The amplified signal can be very similar to the input signal in terms of wavelength, phase, and polarisation; this is particularly important in
optical communications. The verb "to lase" means to give off coherent light or possibly to cut or otherwise treat with coherent light, and is a
back-formation of the term laser.
The first working laser was made by
Theodore H. Maiman in 1960 at
Hughes Research Laboratories in
Malibu, California, beating several research teams including those of Townes at
Columbia University, and Schawlow at
Bell laboratories. Maiman used a solid-state
flashlamp-pumped
ruby crystal to produce red laser light at 694-nanometres wavelength. In the same year the
Iranian physicist
Ali Javan invented the
gas laser. He later received the
Albert Einstein Award.
Common
light sources, such as the
electric light bulb, emit
photons in almost all directions, usually over a wide
spectrum of
wavelengths. Most light sources are also
incoherent; i.e., there is no fixed
phase relationship between the photons emitted by the light source. By contrast, a laser generally emits photons in a narrow, well-defined,
polarised, coherent beam of near-monochromatic light, consisting of a single
wavelength or
hue. Some types of laser, such as
dye lasers and
vibronic solid-state lasers can produce light over a broad range of wavelengths; this property makes them suitable for the generation of extremely short pulses of light, on the order of a femtosecond (10
-15 seconds). A great deal of
quantum mechanics and
thermodynamics theory can be applied to laser action (see
laser science), though in fact many laser types were discovered by
trial and error.
The basic physics of lasers centres around the idea of producing a
population inversion in a
laser medium by "pumping" the medium; i.e., by supplying energy in the form of light or electricity, for example. The medium may then amplify light by the process of stimulated emission. If the light is circulating through the medium by means of a
cavity resonator, and the gain (amplification) in the medium is stronger than the resonator losses, the power of the circulating light can rise exponentially. Eventually it will get so strong that the gain is saturated (reduced). In continuous operation, the intracavity laser power finds an equilibrium value which is saturating the gain exactly to the level of the cavity losses. If the pump power is chosen too small (below the "laser threshold"), the gain is not sufficient to overcome the resonator losses, and the laser will emit only very small light powers.
Population inversion is also the concept behind the
maser, which is similar in principle to a laser but works with
microwaves. The first maser was built by
Charles H. Townes and graduate students J. P. Gordon, and H. J. Zeiger in 1953. Townes later worked with
Arthur L. Schawlow to describe the theory of the laser, or
optical maser as it was then known. The word laser was coined in 1957 by
Gordon Gould. Gordon also coined the words iraser, intending "aser" as the suffix and the spectra of light emitted at as the prefix (examples: X-ray laser = xaser, UltraViolet laser = uvaser) but these terms never became popular. Gordon was also credited with lucrative
patent rights for a gas-discharge laser in 1987, following a protracted 30 year legal battle.
The first maser, developed by Townes, was incapable of continuous output.
Nikolai Basov and
Alexander Prokhorov of the USSR worked independently on the quantum oscillator and solved the problem of continuous output systems by using more than two energy levels. These systems could release stimulated emission without falling to the ground state, thus maintaining a population inversion. In 1964, Charles Townes, Nikolai Basov and Alexandr Prokhorov shared a Nobel Prize in Physics "for fundamental work in the field of quantum electronics, which has led to the construction of oscillators and amplifiers based on the maser-laser principle."
Laser light can be highly intense—able to cut
steel and other metals. The beam emitted by a laser often has a very small
divergence (highly
collimated) though a perfectly collimated beam cannot be created, due to the effect of
diffraction, a laser beam will spread much less than a beam of light generated by other means. A beam generated by a small laboratory laser such as a
helium-
neon (HeNe) laser spreads to approximately 1 mile (1.6 kilometres) in diameter if shone from the
Earth's surface to the
Moon. Some lasers, especially semiconductor lasers due to their small size, produce very divergent beams. However, such a divergent beam can be transformed into a collimated beam by means of a
lens. In contrast, the light from non-laser light sources cannot be collimated by optics as well or much. Using a
waveguide such as an
optical fibre though, diffraction laws governing divergence no longer apply. Other interesting effects happen in
nonlinear optics.
History_of_laser_intensity.jpg 's
Laboratory for Laser Energetics a breakthrough in creating ultrashort-pulse, very high-intensity (
terawatts) laser pulses became available using a technique called
chirped pulse amplification, or CPA, discovered by
Gérard Mourou. Later, in
1994, it was discovered that the balance between the self-focusing refraction (see
Kerr effect) and self-attenuating
diffraction by
ionization and
rarefaction of a laser beam of terawatt intensities in the atmosphere, was found by Mourou and his team at
University of Michigan to have formed light into "filaments" in the atmosphere which acted as their own waveguide and thus experienced no divergence. If a
light filament dropped below the intensity needed for this dynamic balance, called modulation instability, it can
merge with another filament and continue propagating
without broadening as with all earlier means of sending light. The filaments, having made a plasma, though turn the narrowband laser pulse into a broadband pulse having a wholly new set of applications. [http://www.aip.org/pt/vol-54/iss-8/p17.html] [http://www.nrl.navy.mil/content.php?P=03REVIEW59]
Laser_DSC09088.JPG through which the laser passes, it is
not the laser beam itself which is visible there. The laser beam crosses the air and marks a red point on the screen to the right.]]
Uses of lasers
At the time of their invention in 1960, lasers were called a "a solution looking for a problem". Since then, they have become virtually ubiquitous, finding utility in thousands of highly varied applications in every section of modern society from
vision correction to
guidance for transportation and
spacecraft to
thermonuclear fusion. They have been widely regarded as one of the most influential technological achievements of the 20th century.
The exceptional utility which lasers have found in scientific, industrial and commercial applications stems from their
coherency, high
monochromaticity, capability for reaching extremely high powers, or a confluence of these factors. For instance, a laser beam's coherence potentially allows it to be focused down to its
diffraction limit, which at visible wavelengths corresponds to only a few hundred nanometers. This property is what allows a laser to record gigabytes of information in the microscopic pits of a
DVD. It is also what allows a laser of modest
power to be focused to very high
intensities and used for cutting, burning or even vaporizing materials. For example, a
frequency doubled neodymium yttrium aluminum garnet (
Nd:YAG) laser emitting 532 nanometer (green) light at 10 watts output power is theoretically capable of achieving an intensity of
megawatts per
square centimeter. In reality however, perfect focusing of a beam to its diffraction limit is very difficult. See:
Laser applications for more information.
Popular misconceptions
The representation of lasers in
popular culture, especially
science-fiction or other action movies, as well as their criticism are generally very misleading. For instance, contrary to what appears in movies such as
Star Wars, a laser beam is never visible in the vacuum of space and usually does not glow in air either; the ray only glows if some obstacle, such as dust, lies in its path, in much the same way that a sunbeam glows in a dusty atmosphere. Very high intensity beams can be visible in
air due to
Rayleigh scattering or
Raman scattering. Science-fiction film
special effects often depict weapon laser beams propagating at only a few feet per second—i.e., slowly enough to see their progress—whereas in reality they of course travel at the
speed of light.
Some action movies depict security systems using red lasers (and being foiled by the hero, typically using mirrors); the hero may see the path of the beam by sprinkling some white dust in the air. It is actually easier to build infrared laser diodes than visible light laser diodes; therefore such systems have no reason to work in visible light. Other depictions use lethal laser beams as security measures, running continuously and visibly, that would incinerate or slice any passing body. Obviously other methods of indiscriminate maiming and killing have always been easier.
Laser safety
Even low-power lasers with only a few milliwatts of output power can be hazardous to a person's eyesight. At wavelengths which the
cornea and the lens can focus well, the coherence and low divergence of laser light means that it can be focused by the
eye into an extremely small spot on the
retina, resulting in localised burning and permanent damage in seconds or even faster. Lasers are classified into safety classes numbered I, inherently safe, to IV, even scattered light can cause eye and/or skin damage. Laser products available for consumers, such as CD players and laser pointers are usually in class I or II. See also
laser safety.
Common laser types
For a more complete list of laser types see
list of laser types.
-
Gas lasers
--
HeNe (543 nm and 633 nm)
-- Argon(-Ion) (458 nm, 488 nm or 514.5 nm)
--
Carbon dioxide lasers (9.6 µm and 10.6 µm) used in industry for cutting and welding, up to 100 kW possible
--
Carbon monoxide lasers, must be cooled, but extremely powerful, up to 500 kW possible
-
Excimer gas lasers, producing
ultraviolet light, used in semiconductor manufacturing and in
LASIK eye surgery; F
2 (157 nm), ArF (193 nm), KrCl (222 nm), KrF (248 nm), XeCl (308 nm), XeF (351 nm)
- Commonly used laser types for
dermatological procedures including removal of
tattoos,
birthmarks, and
hair: ruby (694 nm), alexandrite (755 nm), pulsed diode array (810 nm), Nd:YAG (1064 nm), Ho:YAG (2090 nm), Er:YAG (2940 nm)
-
Semiconductor laser diodes
-- small: used in laser pointers, laser printers, and CD/DVD players
-- bigger: bigger industrial diode lasers are available used in the industry for cutting and welding, up to 10 kW possible
-
Neodymium-doped YAG lasers (
Nd:YAG), a high-power laser operating in the
infrared, used for cutting, welding and marking of metals and other materials
-
Ytterbium-doped lasers with crystals such as Yb:YAG, Yb:KGW, Yb:KYW, Yb:SYS, Yb:BOYS, Yb:CaF2, or Yb-doped glasses (e.g.
fibers); typically operating around 1020-1050 nm; potentially very high efficiency and high powers due to a small quantum defect; highest laser power in ultrashort pulses achieved with Yb:YAG
-
Erbium-doped
YAG, 1645 nm
-
Thulium-doped YAG, 2015 nm
-
Holmium-doped YAG, 2096 nm, a efficient laser operating in the
infrared, it is strongly absorbed by water-bearing tissues in sections less than a millimeter thick. It is usually operated in a pulsed mode, and passed through optical fiber surgical devices to resurface joints, remove rot from teeth, vaporize cancers, and pulverize kidney and gall stones.
-
Titanium-doped sapphire (
Ti:sapphire) lasers, a highly tunable
infrared laser, used for
spectroscopy-
Erbium-doped fiber lasers, a type of laser formed from a specially made
optical fiber, which is used as an amplifier for optical
communications.
- External-cavity
semiconductor lasers, e.g. for generating high power outputs with good beam quality, wavelength-tunable narrow-linewidth radiation, or ultrashort laser pulses
-
Dye lasers
-
Quantum cascade lasers
See also
-
laser applications,
laser construction,
laser science,
list of lasers,
active laser medium,
ring laser gyroscopeExternal links
-
Sam's Laser FAQ-
Encyclopedia of laser physics and technology-
Liquid Light-
Light turns into glowing liquid-
Experiments Detail How Powerful Ultrashort Laser Pulses Propagate through Air-
Filamentation and Propagation of Ultra-Short, Intense Laser Pulses in Air-
Lasing Activity without Population Inversion-
Lasing without InversionCategory:Quantum mechanicsCategory:Lasersaf:Laserda:Laserde:Lasereo:Laseroes:láserfa:لیزرfr:lasernl:laser
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "laser".
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