Laser.
Publié le 11/05/2013
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their atoms into laser light.
Consequently, they are the most powerful continuous wave (CW) lasers—that is, lasers that emit light continuously rather than in pulses.
C Liquid Lasers
The most common liquid laser media are inorganic dyes contained in glass vessels.
They are pumped by intense flash lamps in a pulse mode or by a separate gas laserin the continuous wave mode.
Some dye lasers are tunable, meaning that the color of the laser light they emit can be adjusted with the help of a prism located insidethe laser cavity.
D Semiconductor Lasers
Semiconductor lasers are the most compact lasers.
Gallium arsenide is the most common semiconductor used.
A typical semiconductor laser consists of a junctionbetween two flat layers of gallium arsenide.
One layer is treated with an impurity whose atoms provide an extra electron, and the other with an impurity whose atomsare one electron short.
Semiconductor lasers are pumped by the direct application of electric current across the junction.
They can be operated in the continuous wavemode with better than 50 percent efficiency.
Only a small percentage of the energy used to excite most other lasers is converted into light.
Scientists have developed extremely tiny semiconductor lasers, called quantum-dot vertical-cavity surface-emitting lasers.
These lasers are so tiny that more than amillion of them can fit on a chip the size of a fingernail.
Common uses for semiconductor lasers include compact disc (CD) players and laser printers.
Semiconductor lasers also form the heart of fiber-optics communicationsystems ( see Fiber Optics).
E Free Electron Lasers
Free electron lasers employ an array of magnets to excite free electrons (electrons not bound to atoms).
First developed in 1977, they are now becoming importantresearch instruments.
Free electron lasers are tunable over a broader range of energies than dye lasers.
The devices become more difficult to operate at higherenergies but generally work successfully from infrared through ultraviolet wavelengths.
Theoretically, electron lasers can function even in the X-ray range.
The free electron laser facility at the University of California at Santa Barbara uses intense far-infrared light to investigate mutations in DNA molecules and to study theproperties of semiconductor materials.
Free electron lasers should also eventually become capable of producing very high-power radiation that is currently too expensiveto produce.
At high power, near-infrared beams from a free electron laser could defend against a missile attack.
IV LASER APPLICATIONS
The use of lasers is restricted only by imagination.
Lasers have become valuable tools in industry, scientific research, communications, medicine, the military, and thearts.
A Industry
Powerful laser beams can be focused on a small spot to generate enormous temperatures.
Consequently, the focused beams can readily and precisely heat, melt, orvaporize material.
Lasers have been used, for example, to drill holes in diamonds, to shape machine tools, to trim microelectronics, to cut fashion patterns, to synthesizenew material, and to attempt to induce controlled nuclear fusion ( see Nuclear Energy).
Highly directional laser beams are used for alignment in construction.
Perfectly straight and uniformly sized tunnels, for example, may be dug using lasers for guidance.Powerful, short laser pulses also make high-speed photography with exposure times of only several trillionths of a second possible.
B Scientific Research
Because laser light is highly directional and monochromatic, extremely small amounts of light scattering and small shifts in color caused by the interaction between laserlight and matter can easily be detected.
By measuring the scattering and color shifts, scientists can study molecular structures of matter.
Chemical reactions can beselectively induced, and the existence of trace substances in samples can be detected.
Lasers are also the most effective detectors of certain types of air pollution.
( see Chemical Analysis; Photochemistry).
Scientists use lasers to make extremely accurate measurements.
Lasers are used in this way for monitoring small movements associated with plate tectonics and forgeographic surveys.
Lasers have been used for precise determination (to within one inch) of the distance between Earth and the Moon, and in precise tests to confirmEinstein’s theory of relativity.
Scientists also have used lasers to determine the speed of light to an unprecedented accuracy.
Very fast laser-activated switches are being developed for use in particle accelerators.
Scientists also use lasers to trap single atoms and subatomic particles in order tostudy these tiny bits of matter ( see Particle Trap).
C Communications
Laser light can travel a large distance in outer space with little reduction in signal strength.
In addition, high-energy laser light can carry 1,000 times the televisionchannels today carried by microwave signals.
Lasers are therefore ideal for space communications.
Low-loss optical fibers have been developed to transmit laser light forearthbound communication in telephone and computer systems.
Laser techniques have also been used for high-density information recording.
For instance, laser lightsimplifies the recording of a hologram, from which a three-dimensional image can be reconstructed with a laser beam.
Lasers are also used to play audio CDs andvideodiscs ( see Sound Recording and Reproduction).
D Medicine
Lasers have a wide range of medical uses.
Intense, narrow beams of laser light can cut and cauterize certain body tissues in a small fraction of a second withoutdamaging surrounding healthy tissues.
Lasers have been used to “weld” the retina, bore holes in the skull, vaporize lesions, and cauterize blood vessels.
Laser surgeryhas virtually replaced older surgical procedures for eye disorders.
Laser techniques have also been developed for lab tests of small biological samples.
E Military Applications.
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