Professional Documents
Culture Documents
COURSE :BS-PH-201
Submitted by
VICKY SINGH 2023114
SHIVAM RAJ 202391
TANISHK SAHJRA 2023112
RAVISHANKAR KUMAR 202369
SHAHID AKHATAR 202389
Unit-IV
Lasers and Fiber
optics
LASERS
History of the LASER
• Invented in 1958 by Charles Townes (Nobel prize
in Physics 1964) and Arthur Schawlow of Bell
Laboratories
Lasers emit light that is highly directional, that is, laser light is emitted as
a relatively narrow beam in a specific direction. Ordinary light, such as
from a light bulb, is emitted in many directions away from the source.
The light from a laser is said to be coherent, which means that the
wavelengths of the laser light are in phase in space and time. Ordinary
light can be a mixture of many wavelengths.
These three properties of laser light are what can make it more
hazardous than ordinary light. Laser light can deposit a lot of energy
within a small area.
5
Monochromacity
• Spontaneous Emission
• Stimulated Emission
• Population inversion
Absorption
E2 E2
hn hn
hn
hn =E2-E1
E1 E1
n2 ( E2 E1 )
exp
E1
n1 kT
example: T=3000 K E2-E1=2.0
• n1 - the number of electrons of energy E1 eV
• n2 - the number of electrons of energy E2 n2 4
4.4 10
•Population inversion- n1
n2>>n1
Einstein’s coefficients
E2
Probability of stimulated absorption R1-2
A21 / B21
r n =
n1 B1 2
1
n2 B21
n1
According to Boltzman statistics: exp( E2 E1 ) / kT exp(hn / kT )
n2
A2 1 / B2 1 8hn 3 / c 3
r (n) = =
B1 2 hn exp(hn / kT ) 1
exp( ) 1
B2 1 kT
Planck’s law
A21 8hn 3
B1-2/B2-1 = 1
B21 c3
The probability of spontaneous emission A2-1 /the probability of
stimulated emission B2-1r(n :
A2 1
exp(hn / kT ) 1
B2 1r (n )
2. kT at 300K ~ 0.025eV.
E1
If n1 > n2
• light is amplified
Necessary condition:
population inversion
How to realize the population inversion?
Thermal excitation: E2
n2 E
exp
n1 kT E1
impossible.
Optically,
electrically.