How Laser Work?

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Posted by Webmaster on 16 Jun 10 - 0 Comments

The Optical Damage Threshold test station at NASA Langley Research Center has three lasers: a high-energy pulsed ND:Yag laser, a Ti:sapphire laser and an alignment HeNe laser.
Photo courtesy NASA
The Optical Damage Threshold test station at NASA Langley Research Center.

“Star Wars,” “Star Trek,” “Battlestar Galactica” — laser technology plays a pivotal role in science fiction movies and books. It’s no doubt thanks to these sorts of stories that we now associate lasers with futuristic warfare and sleek spaceships.

But lasers play a pivotal role in our everyday lives, too. The fact is, they show up in an amazing range of products and technologies. You’ll find them in everything from CD players to dental drills to high-speed metal cutting mac hines to measuring systems. Tattoo removal, hair replacementeye surgery — they all use lasers. But what is a laser? What makes a laser beam different from the beam of a flashlight? Specifically, what makes a laser light different from other kinds of light? How are lasers classified?

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