Understanding Lasers

Chapter 7: Gas Lasers

ABOUT THIS CHAPTER

Gas lasers are one of the three most important laser families, and are in many ways the most varied. In this chapter, we will explore the basics of gas lasers, then learn about the most important types.

7.1 THE GAS LASER FAMILY

The family of gas lasers has grown tremendously since Ali Javan, William R. Bennett Jr., and Donald R. Herriott demonstrated the first gas laser at Bell Laboratories in December 1960. Their helium neon laser was the first laser to generate a continuous beam, and versions modified to emit visible beams remain in widespread use. Since then, laser action has been demonstrated at literally thousands of wavelengths in a wide variety of gases, including other rare gases, metal vapors, and many different molecules.

Gas lasers vary widely in their characteristics. The weakest commercial lasers emit under a thousandth of a watt, but the most powerful you can buy emit thousands of watts in a continuous beam. Experimental high-energy lasers used to assess the potential of laser weapons can generate up to a couple of million watts, but only for seconds at a time. Some gas lasers can emit continuous beams for years; others emit pulses lasting a few billionths of a second. Their outputs range from deep in the vacuum ultraviolet- at wavelengths so short they are blocked completely by air- through the visible and infrared to the borderland of millimeter waves and microwaves.

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