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The Amazing World of Lasers Alexey Belyanin Department of Physics, TAMU Laser Definition and History Laser Radiation Laser System –Active Medium and Pump.

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Presentation on theme: "The Amazing World of Lasers Alexey Belyanin Department of Physics, TAMU Laser Definition and History Laser Radiation Laser System –Active Medium and Pump."— Presentation transcript:

1 The Amazing World of Lasers Alexey Belyanin Department of Physics, TAMU Laser Definition and History Laser Radiation Laser System –Active Medium and Pump –Laser Cavity Laser Types and Applications

2 LASER = Light Amplification by Stimulated Emission of Radiation Laser is a device which transforms energy from other forms into (coherent and highly directional) electromagnetic radiation. 1917 – A. Einstein postulates photons and stimulated emission 1954 – First microwave laser (MASER), Townes, Shawlow, Prokhorov 1960 – First optical laser (Maiman) 1964 – Nobel Prize in Physics: Townes, Prokhorov, Basov Chemical energy Electron beam Electric current Electromagnetic radiation …

3 Microwave ammonia laser  = 24 GHz

4 Ruby laser Cr+3 ions lightly doped in a corundum crystal matrix (0.05% by weight Cr2O3 versus Al2O3) = 693 nm

5 Electromagnetic spectrum

6 Laser radiation Monochromaticity Directionality Coherence

7 Monochromaticity

8 Directionality Radiation comes out of the laser in a certain direction, and spreads at a defined divergence angle (  ) This angular spreading of a laser beam is very small compared to other sources of electromagnetic radiation, and described by a small divergence angle (of the order of milli-radians) Lamp: W = 100 W, at R = 2 m He-Ne Laser: W = 1 mW, r = 2 mm, R = r + R  /2 = 2.1 mm, I = 8 mW/cm 2

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10 Coherence Laser radiation is composed of waves at the same wavelength, which start at the same time and keep their relative phase as they advance.

11 Interference Young Interference Experiment

12 Michelson Interferometer Nobel Prize in Physics 1907

13 For a completely coherent wave, defining its phase along particular surface at specific time, automatically determine its phase at all points in space at all time. Temporal Coherence is related to monochromaticity. Spatial Coherence is related to directionality and uniphase wavefronts. Coherence time t c ~ 1/ , where  is linewidth of laser radiation Coherence Length (L c ) is the maximum path difference which still shows interference: L c = ct c = c/  Typical laser linewidths: from MHz to many GHz Record values ~ kHz

14 Laser System 1.Active (gain) medium that can amplify light that passes through it 2.Energy pump source to create a population inversion in the gain medium 3.Two mirrors that form a resonator cavity

15 Amplifier vs. Generator No (or negative) feedback: Positive feedback:

16 Active medium N 1, N 2, N 3 … – populations of states 1,2,3, … Population inversion: N 2 > N 1 or N 3 > N 2 etc.

17 Thermodynamic equilibrium N 2 /N 1 = = exp(-(E 2 -E 1 )/kT) In optics E 2 – E 1 ~ 1 eV while at room temperature kT = 0.025 eV. Therefore, N 2 /N 1 ~ 10 -18

18 Three one-photon interactions between radiation and matter 1.Photon Absorption Absorption rate: d N 2 (t)/dt = K n(t) N 1 (t) n(t) - number of incoming photons per unit volume

19 2.Spontaneous emission of a photon d N 2 (t)/dt = - g 21 N 2 (t) = - N 2 (t)/ t 2 Solution: N 2 (t) = N 2 (0) exp(-g 21 t) = N 2 (0) exp(-t/  2 ) Spontaneous decay rate: Spontaneous photons are emitted randomly and in all directions

20 3.Stimulated emission of a photon d N 2 (t)/dt = - K n(t) N 2 (t) Proportionality constant (K) for stimulated emission and (stimulated) absorption are identical. Stimulated photons have the same frequency and direction. Stimulated emission is a result of resonance response of the atom to a forcing signal!

21 Rate Equations dN 2 (t)/dt tot = dN 2 (t)/dt absorp + dN 2 (t)/dt Stimul + dN 2 (t)/dt Spontan = +Kn(t)[N 1 (t)-N 2 (t)]-g 21 N 2 (t) = - dN 1 (t)/dt tot dn(t)/dt = -K [N 1 (t)-N 2 (t)] n(t) n(t) = n(0) exp[-K(N 1 -N 2 )t]; N 2 > N 1 is needed for amplification

22 Three-level laser scheme For population inversion, more than 50% of all atoms must be in state 2. Very tough requirement!

23 Four-level laser scheme Much lower pumping rate is needed

24 Helium-Neon laser

25 Laser Threshold 1.Scattering and absorption losses at the end mirrors. 2.Output radiation through the output coupler. 3.Scattering and absorption losses in the active medium, and at the side walls. 4.Diffraction losses because of the finite size of the laser components. At threshold the gain should be equal to losses Sources of losses:

26 Gain spectrum can be very broad

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28 Broadening of the gain spectrum

29 Laser Cavity

30 Longitudinal modes in Fabry-Perot cavity

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32 Hole burning in the gain spectrum

33 Transverse modes

34 How to make a laser operate in a single basic transverse mode?

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36 Laser Types Lasers can be divided into groups according to different criteria: 1.The state of matter of the active medium: solid, liquid, gas, or plasma. 2.The spectral range of the laser wavelength: visible, Infra-Red (IR), etc. 3.The excitation (pumping) method of the active medium: Optical pumping, electric pumping, etc. 4.The characteristics of the radiation emitted from the laser. 5.The number of energy levels which participate in the lasing process.

37 Classification by active medium Gas lasers (atoms, ions, molecules) Solid-state lasers Semiconductor lasers –Diode lasers –Unipolar (quantum cascade) lasers Dye lasers (liquid) X-ray lasers Free electron lasers

38 Gas Lasers The laser active medium is a gas at a low pressure (A few milli-torr). The main reasons for using low pressure are: To enable an electric discharge in a long path, while the electrodes are at both ends of a long tube. To obtain narrow spectral width not expanded by collisions between atoms. The first gas laser was operated by T. H. Maiman in 1961, one year after the first laser (Ruby) was demonstrated. The first gas laser was a Helium-Neon laser, operating at a wavelength of 1152.27 [nm] (Near Infra-Red).

39 Pumping by electric discharge

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41 Argon ion laser High power, but low efficiency

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44 CO 2 Laser

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46 Gas lasers exist in nature! Stellar atmospheres Planetary atmospheres Interstellar medium

47 Solid state lasers Nd ions in YAG crystal host

48 Inertial confinement for nuclear fusion

49 Laser Fusion

50 D + T ==> 4 He + n + 17.6 [MeV]

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52 Free electron lasers

53 Applications Industrial applications Medical (surgery, diagnostics) Military (weapons, blinders, target pointers,…) Daily (optical communications, optical storage, memory) Research …


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