Tuesday, March 24, 2020
Laser Technology Essays - Optics, Laser Science, Physics, Light
  Laser Technology    Laser Technology    The laser is a device that a beam of light  that is both scientifically and practically of great use because it is  coherent light. The beam is produced by a process known as stimulated emission,  and the word "laser" is an acronym for the phrase "light amplification  by stimulated emission of radiation."    Light is just like radio  waves in the way that it can also carry information. The information is  encoded in the beam as variations in the frequency or shape of the light  wave. The good part is that since light waves have much higher frequencies  they can also hold much more information.    Not only is the particle  the smallest light unit but it is a particle as well as a wave. In beams  of light whether they are ordinary natural or artificial the photon waves  will not be traveling together because they are not being emitted at exactly  the same moment but instead at random short bursts. Even if the light is  of a single frequency that statement would also be true. A laser is useful  because it produces light that is not only of essentially a single frequency  but also coherent, with the light waves all moving along in unison.    Lasers consist of several  components. A few of the many things that the so-called active medium might  consist of are, atoms of a gas, molecules in a liquid, and ions in a crystal.    Another component consists of some method of introducing energy into the  active medium, such as a flash lamp for example. Another component is the  pair of mirrors on either side of the active medium which consists of one  that transmits some of the radiation that hits it. If the active component  in the laser is a gas laser than each atom is characterized by a set of  energy states, or energy levels, of which it may consist. An example of  the energy states could be pictured as a unevenly spaced ladder which the  higher rungs mean higher states of energy and the lower rungs mean lower  states of energy. If left disturbed for a long time the atom will reach  its ground state or lowest state of energy. According to quantum mechanics  there is only one light frequency that the atom will work with. There are  three ways that the atom can deal with the presence of light either it  can absorb the light, or spontaneous emission occurs, or stimulated emission  occurs. This means that if the atom is at its lowest state that it may  absorb the light and jump to its high state and emit extra light while  doing so. The second thing it may do is if it is at its highest state it  can fall spontaneously to its lower state thus emitting light. The third  way is that the atom will jump from its upper state to its lower state  thus emitting extra light. Spontaneous emission is not effected by light  yet it is rather on a time scale characteristic of the states involved.    That is called the spontaneous lifetime. In stimulated emission the frequency  of the light is the same as the frequency of the light that stimulated  it.    Carbon-monoxide, color  center, excimer, free-electron, gas-dynamic, helium-cadmium, hydrogen-fluoride,  deuterium-fluoride, iodine, Raman spin-flip, and rare-gas halide lasers  are just a few of the many types of lasers there are out there in the world.    The helium-neon laser is the most common and by far the cheapest costing  about $170. The diode laser is the smallest being packed in a transistor  like package. The dye laser are very good for their broad, continuously  variable wavelength capabilities.    The theory of stimulated  emission was first proved by Albert Einstein in 1916, then population inverse  was discussed by V. A. Fabrikant in 1940. This led to the building of the  first ammonia maser in 1954 by J. P. Gordon, H. J. Zeiger, and Charles    H. Townes. In July of 1960 Theodore H. Maiman announced the generation  of a pulse of coherent red light by means of a red crystal- the first laser.    In 1987 Gordon Gould won a patent he had been trying to get for three years  to build the first gas-discharged laser which he had conceived in 1957.    In that same patent the helium-neon was included.    Bibliography:    Bertolotti, M., Masers and lasers: An    Historical Approach (1983);    Kasuya, T., and Tsukakoshi, M., Handbook  of Laser Science and Technology  (1988); Meyers,Robert, ed., Encyclopedia  of Lasers, 3d ed. (1989); Steen, W. M., ed., Lasers in Manufacturing (1989);    Whimmery, J. R., ed., Lasers: Invention to Application (1987); Young, M.,    Optics and Lasers, 3d rev. ed.    
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