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22. Lasers

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A laser is a medium that stores energy, surrounded by two mirrors. ... Invented in 1960 by Ted Maiman at Hughes Research Labs, it was the first laser. Four-level ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: 22. Lasers


1
22. Lasers
  • Stimulated Emission and Gain
  • The Laser
  • Threshhold
  • Four-level System
  • Laser Frequencies
  • "Longitudical Modes"
  • Gausssian Beams
  • Laser Resonators
  • Spatial or "Transverse Modes"

2
The Laser
A laser is a medium that stores energy,
surrounded by two mirrors. Photons entering the
medium undergo stimulated emission. As a result,
the irradiance exiting from the medium exceeds
that entering it. A partially reflecting output
mirror lets some light out.
A laser will lase if the beam increases in
irradiance during a round trip that is, if
The laser achieves "Threshold" if
3
Laser Gain
  • The Gain, G, is the amount by which a beam is
    amplified when it traverses a medium. Neglecting
    absorption
  • The solution is
  • There can be exponential gain or loss in
    irradiance. Normally, there is loss. But if
    there is gain, we define the gain, G

Stimulated emission minus absorption
4
How to achieve laser threshold
  • In order to achieve threshold, G gt 1, and
    stimulated emission
  • must exceed absorption
  • B N1 I gt B N0 I
  • Or, equivalently,
  • This condition is called "Inversion."
  • It does not occur naturally.
  • In order to achieve inversion, we must hit the
    laser medium hard in some way.

N1 gt N0
5
The Ruby Laser
Invented in 1960 by Ted Maiman at Hughes Research
Labs, it was the first laser.
6
Four-levelSystem
fast
Molecules accumulate in this level, leading to an
inversion with respect to this level.
The four-level system is the ideal laser system.
slow
Laser transition
fast
7
The Helium-Neon Laser
Energetic electrons in a glow discharge collide
with and excite He atoms, which then collide with
and transfer the excitation to Ne atoms, an ideal
4-level system.
8
Diode Lasers
9
Laser frequencies modes
  • An infinite train of identical pulses can be
    written
  • E(t) III(t/T) f(t)
  • where f(t) represents a single pulse and T is the
    time between pulses. The Convolution Theorem
    states that the Fourier Transform of a
    convolution is the product of the Fourier
    Transforms. So

If this train of pulses results from a single
pulse bouncing back and forth inside a laser
cavity of round-trip time T. The spacing between
frequencies is then dw 2p/T or dn 1/T.
10
Laser modes in a real laser
  • A finite train of identical pulses can be
    written
  • where g(t) is a Gaussian envelope over the pulse
    train.

11
Laser Modes
A lasers frequencies are often called
longitudinal modes.
12
Gaussian Beams
  • Real laser beams are localized in space at the
    laser and hence
  • must diffract as they propagate away from the
    laser.

The beam has a waist at z 0, where the spot
size is w0. It then expands to w w(z) with
distance z away from the laser. The beam radius
of curvature, R(z), also increases with distance
far away.
13
Gaussian Beam Math
  • The expression for a real laser
  • beam's electric field is given by
  • w(z) is the spot size vs. distance from the
    waist,
  • R(z) is the beam radius of curvature, and
  • y(z) is a phase shift.
  • This equation is the solution to the wave
    equation when we require that the beam be well
    localized at some point (i.e., its waist).

14
Gaussian Beam Spot, Radius, and Phase
  • The expressions for the spot size,
  • radius of curvature, and phase shift
  • where zR is the Rayleigh Range (the distance over
    which the beam remains about the same diameter),
    and it's given by

15
Gaussian Beam Collimation
  • Twice the Rayleigh range is the
  • distance over which the beam
  • remains about the same size,
  • that is, remains "collimated.
  • _____________________________________________
  • .225 cm 0.003 km 0.045 km
  • 2.25 cm 0.3 km 5 km
  • 22.5 cm 30 km 500 km
  • _____________________________________________
  • Tightly focused laser beams expand quickly.
  • Weakly focused beams expand less quickly, but
    still expand.
  • As a result, it's very difficult to shoot down a
    missile with a laser.

Collimation
Collimation Waist spot Distance
Distance size w0 l 10.6 µm
l 0.633 µm
Longer wavelengths expand faster than shorter
ones.
16
Gaussian Beam Divergence
  • Far away from the waist, the
  • spot size of a Gaussian beam will be
  • The beam 1/e divergence half angle is then w(z) /
    z as z
  • The smaller the waist and the larger the
    wavelength, the larger the divergence angle.

17
Focusing a Gaussian Beam
  • A lens will focus a collimated Gaussian beam to a
    new spot size
  • d0 2 f l / D
  • So the smaller the desired focus, the BIGGER the
    input beam should be!

18
The Guoy Phase Shift
  • The phase factor yields a phase shift relative
    to the phase of a
  • plane wave when a Gaussian beam goes through a
    focus.

Phase relative to a plane wave Irradiance
(for reference)
19
Laser Spatial Modes
  • Also referred to as Transverse Electro-magnetic
    (TEM) modes

Electric field
The 00 mode is the Gaussian beam. Higher-order
modes involve multiplication of a Gaussian by a
Hermite polynomial.
Irradiance
20
Laser Resonators
  • Mirror curvatures play a big role in lasers.

21
Q-switching
  • Q-switching involves
  • Preventing the laser from lasing until the flash
    lamp is finished flashing, and
  • Abruptly allowing the laser to lase.
  • The pulse length is limited by the round-trip
    time of the laser and yields pulses 10 - 100 ns
    long.

Several kV of applied voltage makes the Pockels
cell a quarter-wave plate. Abruptly switching it
to zero turns off the effect.
22
Stable vs. Unstable Laser Resonators
  • Stable
  • resonator

Unstable resonator
Unstable resonators have much bigger beam sizes
(although they have a hole), and so are better
for high-power lasers.
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