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"LaserFest 2010"

17 Comments -

1 – 17 of 17
Blogger Bee said...

Did you make the first picture yourself? The colors look very Stefan-ish ;-p

12:04 PM, February 02, 2010

Blogger stefan said...

Oh, indeed, it's home-made GLE graphics ;-)

12:20 PM, February 02, 2010

Blogger Steven Colyer said...

Most excellent, Stefan. Righteous props. One Grandfather's name was also Stefan, but the Ellis Island clerks wrote it as Steven. Good name. Sorry if I sounded like Sean Penn in "Fast Times at Ridgemont High."

Stefan, if it's not too much trouble, could you squeeze in a mention of the carbon dioxide laser? It has tremendous industrial uses, and I happen to know its Bell Labs (he's no longer there) inventor, Dr. Patel.

12:23 PM, February 02, 2010

Blogger Steven Colyer said...

From Wiki, to save you the trouble:

The carbon dioxide laser (CO2 laser) was one of the earliest gas lasers to be developed (invented by Kumar Patel of Bell Labs in 1964[1]), and is still one of the most useful. Carbon dioxide lasers are the highest-power continuous wave lasers that are currently available. They are also quite efficient: the ratio of output power to pump power can be as large as 20%.

The CO2 laser produces a beam of infrared light with the principal wavelength bands centering around 9.4 and 10.6 micrometers.

Friggin' awesome. I feel the need to play Star Wars: Battlefront on my (kid's) PSP now.

12:32 PM, February 02, 2010

Blogger Kris Krogh said...

Hi Stefan,

Physics World has a piece on the “Cirque du Laisaire” event sponsored by the SPIE. They say:

The highlight of the evening was the laser magic show, in which a magician called Latimer appeared to pick up a laser beam and spin it around his head. The trick didn’t get much applause, but there’s a reason for that; as the man next to me commented, “Right now, 400 physicists in this room are too busy trying to work out how the hell he did that.”

Maybe your readers would enjoy the show:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T-XoN1Ts6Wg

Cheers, Kris

1:21 PM, February 02, 2010

Blogger Bee said...

Wasn't there a Nobelprize recently for optical waveguides?

1:31 PM, February 02, 2010

Blogger Bee said...

Stefan: Good old gle... Is the wave a sin function? It is ridiculously difficult to make a decent periodic "wavy line" with most drawing applications. They have all kinds of fancy features for polygons (stars, elipses, filled, non-filled etc) but if you want to make a sin function, you're on your own and end up using splines trying to define the coordinates of points periodically. Likewise, if you're drawing by hand, a sin curve is really hard to do. Straight lines, rectangles and with some practice polygons, circles and ellipses are doable, but for whatever reasons periodic functions are difficult. (Unless you use a special tool, like one for Feynman diagrams or so.) Best,

B.

1:37 PM, February 02, 2010

Blogger Michael Varney said...

Go CU! (University of Colorado that is)

Maiman's undergraduate Alma mater.

2:00 PM, February 02, 2010

Blogger stefan said...

Hi Steven,

so far I hadn't followed the story up to the CO₂ laser ;-)... thanks for bringing it up. Here is the Physical Review paper where it is described, and here is a scheme of the energy levels involved.

BTW, this is one of the most important types of lasers used in industrial/engineering applications, and it was invented in 1964. That's interesting, because I was wondering whether at the time when Goldfinger was made, such powerful lasers as the one in the movie did exist already, or if this was, back then, still science fiction? It seems it wasl science fiction, though very close to reality?...

Cheers, Stefan

4:58 PM, February 02, 2010

Blogger stefan said...

Hi Kris,

oh, it seems they also showed the Goldfinger clip at the event - I had not read that post before, seems like I've had a good idea independently ;-)

... in which a magician called Latimer appeared to pick up a laser beam and spin it around his head.

sounds to me like he has invented the laser sword! It also looks like that - the clip is really cool - thanks!

Stefan

5:11 PM, February 02, 2010

Blogger stefan said...

Dear Bee,

well, the wavy line has indeed been made with the "photon propagator" from the feyn.gle package.

Wasn't there a Nobelprize recently for optical waveguides?

Absolutely, glass fibres... And the guys from the other half of the price, CCD chips, had both been at Bell Labs at the time when Maiman scooped them - Willard Boyle tried to build a semiconductor laser then (light from electron-hole recombination, it didn't work, but they filed a patent), and in 1962 built the first continuously operating ruby laser - Maiman's laser was a pulsed one.


Cheers, Stefan

5:26 PM, February 02, 2010

OpenID kaleberg said...

I remember all the excitement over the laser in the 1960s. I even got an introductory book when I was in high school. It suggested building a ruby laser as a science project, borrowing a ruby crystal, silvering it and building a xenon flash tube rig to set it off. By the late 60s there were some CO2 lasers being used for industrial purposes, but it was the He Ne (pronounced hee-nee) lasers that got used in LaserDisc analog video players with their diffraction grating silvery LP sized video disks. (I still have an old LaserDisk player).

11:32 PM, February 02, 2010

Blogger Phil Warnell said...

Hi Stefan,

A very nice piece and just at a time when I was wondering when we might again see something of yours. I noticed the discussion about the Bond film as to whether the laser as depicted was for the time a reality or rather science fiction and would in the context of application suggest it represented neither. That’s because as Einstein had long since written the paper to demonstrate it was theoretically possible, it then was no longer merely fictional fantasy and thus then only required some bright and dedicated people, such as the ones you noted, to have the potential of his splendid light be realized. However the most interesting thing I find about this being it one of those times when the more practical and beneficial aspects of an idea in science to be the first and most dominant one, as that dreaded death ray is still for the most part practically unrealized, although certainly still a potential.

Best,

Phil

6:35 AM, February 03, 2010

Blogger Steven Colyer said...

Hi Stefan, I'm pretty sure that laser Magician clip was quite staged. He's a professional illusionist, and it was dark as well. A simple wrist flick could explain the falling hoop, a wire the hanger, and two small laser pointers in his hands (and lots of practice) the other stuff.

Yes, Goldfinger and '63. Hmm. Interesting. Well, I'm sure there was much competition at the time as to who would first develop "ray guns." There is of course the problem, as shown here, that there are often technological issues to be overcome in exploiting the known science of the day.

However, given time, the next generation, shown here(complete with demonstration, as well as a critique by the small-minded), often solves the problem.

Lesson learned? That when it comes to attaching laser beams to the heads of various aquata, Sea Bass are simply no substitute for Sharks, who in turn are no substitute for Bananafish.

6:42 AM, February 03, 2010

Blogger Phil Warnell said...

Hi Steven,

Well in terms of mayhem we can’t quite give Doctor evil his wish, yet the hearts of some can still seem find ways to cast Einstein’s wonderful thought in a bad light.

Best,

Phil

7:00 AM, February 03, 2010

Blogger Steven Colyer said...

Oh, what have I done? I brought up the subject of Laser pointers a mere 4 days before The Super Bowl. I found that clip disturbing, Phil, but thanks anyway. I always considered Hockey to be a unification of two previously-thought un-unifiable sports: Field Hockey on Skates, and Amateur Boxing. Having said that, it's terrible when the fans intervene, and in such a nasty harmful way.

I do question how effective a laser pointer would be though, as a weapon. There is such a thing as dispersion, and although one can find real ray guns on sale via the internet, they are quite weak. In Iraq the best we have are infraredders that cause headaches when aimed and fired at suspicious persons approaching checkpoints.

7:42 AM, February 03, 2010

Blogger Uncle Al said...

Pink laser ruby self-destructs. Internal flaws, dust on a rod face, too much power then internal self-focusing will blow the rod. All is not lost! Cut a gemstone blank, cut and polish facets, then add a megarad of Co-60 gamma sterilization. There results an extraordinary padparadscha color.

11:39 AM, February 03, 2010

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