Monday, March 26, 2007

Amplification of light



All lasers contain an energized substance that can increase the intensity of light passing through it. This substance is called the amplifying medium or, sometimes, the gain medium, and it can be a solid, a liquid or a gas. Whatever its physical form, the amplifying medium must contain atoms, molecules or ions, a high proportion of which can store energy that is subsequently released as light. How the amplifying medium increases the intensity of light passing through it will be explained in sections 4 and 5. For the moment, we will just assume that light amplification is possible.

In a neodymium YAG (Nd:YAG) laser, the amplifying medium is a rod of yttrium aluminium garnate (YAG) containing ions of the lanthanide metal neodymium (Nd). In a dye laser, it is a solution of a fluorescent dye in a solvent such as methanol. In a helium-neon laser, it is a mixture of the gases helium and neon. In a laser diode, it is a thin layer of semiconductor material sandwiched between other semiconductor layers. The factor by which the intensity of the light is increased by the amplifying medium is known as the gain. The gain is not a constant for a particular type of medium. It's magnitude depends upon the wavelength of the incoming light, the intensity of the incoming light, the length of the amplifying medium and also upon the extent to which the amplifying medium has been energized.

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