Figure 32 Artist’s rendering of sun-pumped laser as it would operate
in space. The sun’s rays are collected by a parabolic reflector
and are focused on the laser’s surface by two cylindrical mirrors.
- Sun
- Parabolic Collector
- Hyperbolic-cylindric secondary mirror
- Semi-circular-cylindric tertiary mirror
- Laser beam
A LASER IN YOUR FUTURE?
Atomic energy, only a scientific
dream a few short years
ago, is now providing needed
power in many parts of the
world. In the same way, the
laser, also an atomic phenomenon,
has made its way
out of the laboratory and into
the fields of medicine, commerce,
and industry. If it
hasn’t touched your life as
yet, you need only be patient.
It will.
Indeed the most exciting
probability of all is that lasers
undoubtedly will change our
lives in ways we cannot even
conceive of now.
Figure 33 Tiny hole drilled in
paper clip demonstrates remarkable
capability of laser beam. Paper
clip is 1¼ inches long. Hole
(top) was drilled by the laser microwelder
shown in Figure 1.
SUGGESTED REFERENCES
Books
- ABC’s of Masers and Lasers, Allan H. Lytel, Howard W. Sams and Company, Inc., Publishers, Indianapolis, Indiana 46206, 1966, 96 pp., $2.25.
- The Laser: Light That Never Was Before, Ben Patrusky, Dodd, Mead and Company, New York 10016, 1966, 128 pp., $3.50.
- Masers and Lasers, Manfred Brotherton, McGraw-Hill Book Company, New York 10036, 1964, 224 pp., $8.50.
- Masers and Lasers, H. Arthur Klein, J. B. Lippincott Company, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19105, 1963, 184 pp., $3.95.
- The Story of the Laser, John M. Carroll, E. P. Dutton and Company, Inc., New York 10003, 1964, 181 pp., $3.95.
- Quantum Electronics: The Fundamentals of Transistors and Lasers, John R. Pierce, Doubleday and Company, Inc., New York 10017, 1966, 138 pp., $1.25.
- Lasers and Their Applications, Kurt R. Stehling, The World Publishing Company, Cleveland, Ohio 44102, 1966, 192 pp., $6.00.
- Understanding Lasers and Masers, Stanley Leinwoll, Hayden Book Companies, New York 10011, 1964, 96 pp., $1.95.
- Atomic Light: Lasers, Richard B. Nehrich, Jr., Glenn I. Voran, and Norman F. Dessel, Sterling Publishing Company, Inc., New York 10016, 1967, 136 pp., $3.95.
Articles—General and Historical
- Advances in Optical Masers, A. L. Schawlow, Scientific American, 209: 34 (July 1963).
- The Evolution of the Physicist’s Picture of Matter, P. A. M. Dirac, Scientific American, 208: 45 (May 1963).
- Filling in the Blanks in the Laser’s Spectrum, F. M. Johnson, Electronics, 39: 82 (April 18, 1966).
- The Amateur Scientist—How a persevering amateur can build a gas laser in the home, C. L. Stong, Scientific American, 211: 227 (September 1964).
- The Amateur Scientist—Homemade Laser, C. L. Stong, Scientific American, 213: 108 (December 1965).
- The Amateur Scientist—How to make holograms and experiment with them or with ready-made holograms, C. L. Stong, Scientific American, 216: 122 (February 1967).
- The Maser, James P. Gordon, Scientific American, 199: 42 (December 1958).
- The Quantum Theory: Early Years to 1923, Karl Darrow, Scientific American, 186: 47 (March 1952).
- Laser’s Bright Magic, T. Meloy, National Geographic Magazine, 130: 858 (December 1966).
- Infrared and Optical Masers (original paper), A. L. Schawlow and C. H. Townes, Physical Review, 112: 1940 (December 15, 1958).
- Laser Market Enters Era of Practicality, W. Mathews, Electronic News, 11: 1 (April 18, 1966).
- Lasers, A. K. Levine, American Scientist, 51: 14 (March 1963).
- Lasers, A. L. Schawlow, Science, 149: 13 (July 2, 1965).
- Lasers and Coherent Light, A. L. Schawlow, Physics Today, 17: 28 (January 1964).
- The Laser’s Dazzling Future, L. Lessing, Fortune, 67: 138 (June 1963).
- Optical Masers, A. L. Schawlow, Scientific American, 204: 52 (June 1961).
- Optical Pumping, A. L. Bloom, Scientific American, 202: 72 (October 1960).
- Research on Maser-Laser Principle Wins Nobel Prize in Physics, J. P. Gordon, Science, 146: 897 (November 13, 1964).
- Resource Letter MOP-1 on Masers (Microwave through Optical) and on Optical Pumping, H. W. Moos, American Journal of Physics, 32: 589 (August 1964), extensive bibliography. Available from American Institute of Physics, 335 East 45th Street, New York 10017. Enclose stamped return envelope.
- Advances in Holography, K. S. Pennington, Scientific American, 218: 40 (February 1968).
- Applications of Laser Light, D. R. Herriott, Scientific American, 219: 140 (September 1968).
- Holography for the Sophomore Laboratory, R. H. Webb, American Journal of Physics, 36: 62 (January 1968).
- Laser Light, A. L. Schawlow, Scientific American, 219: 120 (September 1968).
- The Modulation of Laser Light, D. F. Nelson, Scientific American, 218: 17 (June 1968).
Articles—Special Subjects
- Biological Effects of High Peak Power Radiation, S. Fine et al., Life Sciences, 3: 209 (1964).
- The Interaction of Light with Light, J. A. Giordmaine, Scientific American, 210: 38 (April 1964).
- Chemical Lasers, George C. Pimental, Scientific American, 214: 32 (April 1966).
- Color Laser Stores Data, J. Eberhart, Science News, 90: 51 (July 23, 1966).
- Communication by Laser, Stewart E. Miller, Scientific American, 214: 19 (January 1966).
- Guidelines for Selecting Laser Materials, R. H. Hoskins, Electronic Design, 13: M29 (July 19, 1965).
- Holography: The Picture Looks Good, J. Blum, Electronics, 39: 139 (April 18, 1966).
- How Dangerous Are Lasers?, L. H. Dulberger, Electronics, 35: 27 (January 26, 1962).
- Injection Lasers, R. W. Keyes, Industrial Research, 6: 46 (October 1964).
- Laser Potential in Deep-Space Link Grows, B. Miller, Aviation Week and Space Technology, 84: 71 (January 31, 1966).
- Laser Retinal Photocoagulator, N. S. Kapany et al., Applied Optics, 4: 517 (May 1965).
- Laser Welding in Electronic Circuit Fabrication, J. P. Epperson, Electrical Design News (EDN), 10: 8 (October 1965).
- The Light That Slices Inch into Millionths, (use of interferometry in industry), Steel, 158: 38 (February 28, 1966).
- The Optical Heterodyne—Key to Advanced Space Signaling, S. Jacobs, Electronics, 36: 29 (July 12, 1963).
- Photography by Laser, E. N. Leith and J. Upatnieks, Scientific American, 212: 24 (June 1965).
- Liquid Lasers, Alexander Lempicki and Harold Samelson, Scientific American, 216: 81 (June 1967).
- Plasma Experiments with a 570-kJ Theta-Pinch, F. C. Yahoda, et al., Journal of Applied Physics, 35: 2351 (August 1964).
- A Sun-Pumped CW One-Watt Laser, C. G. Young, Applied Optics, 5: 993 (June 1966).
- 3-D Image Made at Home, Science News, 90: 185 (10 September 1966).
- Scanning with Lasers, Robert A. Myers, International Science and Technology, 65: 40 (May 1967).
Booklets
- Applications of Lasers to Information Handling, The Perkin-Elmer Corporation, Norwalk, Connecticut 06852, 1966, 32 pp., free. Reprint of five talks given by company personnel.
- Laser Interferometer, Airborne Instruments Laboratory, Division of Cutler-Hammer, Inc., Deer Park, Long Island, New York 11729, 1965, 20 pp., free. Collection of article reprints.
- Laser: The New Light, Bell Telephone Laboratories, Murray Hill, New Jersey 07971, 19 pp., free. Full color, nontechnical brochure presents some background, principles, and applications of the laser.
Argon laser, which emits high-power blue-green beam continuously,
has application in signal processing, communications, and spectroscopy.
This unit is being beamed through prisms that separate
its several discrete wavelengths of light, displayed on card at left
foreground.
FOOTNOTES
[1]Sometimes referred to as
hertz (abbreviated Hz), for the 19th
Century German physicist Heinrich Hertz; 1000 Hz = 1000 cps.
[2]Devised in France and officially adopted there in 1799, the
metric system uses the meter as the basic unit of length and has
been proposed for all measurements in this country.
[3]Named
for the Swedish physicist Anders J. Angstrom.
[4]The wavelength,
indicated by the Greek letter λ (lambda) is
related to frequency (f) in the proportion λ (in meters) =
300,000,000/f. (The number 300,000,000 is the velocity of light in
meters per second.)
[5]Microwaves are radio waves with frequencies above 1000
megacycles per second.
[6]Ten
to 30,000,000 kilocycles per second; this is low in the
electromagnetic spectrum, but not low in terms of the radio
spectrum, which has a low-frequency classification of its own.
[7]Primitive as early
radios were by today’s standards, they
brought a new era to communication at the time. Unmodulated
CW (continuous wave) transmissions and crystal receivers were
used to summon rescuers in the
Titanic disaster of 1912, for example.
[8]Energy = h (Planck’s constant) × frequency. Planck’s constant
is the energy of 1 quantum of radiation, and equals 6.62556 × 10⁻²⁷
erg-sec.
[9]Each photon carries 1
quantum of radiation energy, which is a
unit equal to the product of the radiation frequency and Planck’s
constant (see footnote
page 15).
[10]Einstein was awarded the Nobel Prize in 1921 for his 1905
explanation of the photoelectric effect (in terms of quanta of
energy) and
not for his relativity theory.
[11]Einstein’s theoretical explanation applies in the case of stimulation
of a single atom. In practical stimulation, directionality is
enhanced by stimulating many atoms in phase.
[12]An atomic clock is a device that uses the extremely fast vibrations
of molecules or atomic nuclei to measure time. These
vibrations remain constant with time, consequently short intervals
can be measured with much higher precision than by mechanical
or electrical clocks.
[13]The 1966 Nobel Prize in Physics was awarded to Prof. Alfred
Kastler of the University of Paris for his research on optical
pumping and studies on the energy levels of atoms.
[14]See
Accelerators, a companion booklet in this series, for a full
account of the Stanford “Atom Smasher”.
[15]For descriptions of fission and fusion processes, see
Controlled
Nuclear Fusion,
Nuclear Reactors, and
Nuclear Power
Plants, other booklets in this series.
[16]A bit is a digit, or unit of information, in the binary (base-of-two)
system used in electronic data transmission systems.
[17]See
SNAP,
Nuclear Space Reactors and
Power from Radioisotopes,
other booklets in this series, for descriptions of nuclear
sources of power for space.
This booklet is one of the “Understanding the Atom”
Series. Comments are invited on this booklet and others
in the series; please send them to the Division of Technical
Information, U. S. Atomic Energy Commission, Washington,
D. C. 20545.
Published as part of the AEC’s educational assistance
program, the series includes these titles:
Accelerators
Animals in Atomic Research
Atomic Fuel
Atomic Power Safety
Atoms at the Science Fair
Atoms in Agriculture
Atoms, Nature, and Man
Books on Atomic Energy for Adults and Children
Careers in Atomic Energy
Computers
Controlled Nuclear Fusion
Cryogenics, The Uncommon Cold
Direct Conversion of Energy
Fallout From Nuclear Tests
Food Preservation by Irradiation
Genetic Effects of Radiation
Index to the UAS Series
Lasers
Microstructure of Matter
Neutron Activation Analysis
Nondestructive Testing
Nuclear Clocks
Nuclear Energy for Desalting
Nuclear Power and Merchant Shipping
Nuclear Power Plants
Nuclear Propulsion for Space
Nuclear Reactors
Nuclear Terms, A Brief Glossary
Our Atomic World
Plowshare
Plutonium
Power from Radioisotopes
Power Reactors in Small Packages
Radioactive Wastes
Radioisotopes and Life Processes
Radioisotopes in Industry
Radioisotopes in Medicine
Rare Earths
Research Reactors
SNAP, Nuclear Space Reactors
Sources of Nuclear Fuel
Space Radiation
Spectroscopy
Synthetic Transuranium Elements
The Atom and the Ocean
The Chemistry of the Noble Gases
The Elusive Neutrino
The First Reactor
The Natural Radiation Environment
Whole Body Counters
Your Body and Radiation
A single copy of any one booklet, or of no more than three
different booklets, may be obtained free by writing to:
USAEC, P. O. BOX 62, OAK RIDGE, TENNESSEE 37830
Complete sets of the series are available to school and
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available for reference or for use by groups. Requests
should be made on school or library letterheads and indicate
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Transcriber’s Notes
- Silently corrected a few typos.
- Retained publication information from the printed edition: this eBook is public-domain in the country of publication.
- In the text versions only, text in italics is delimited by _underscores_.