1 / 53

FI-196 Eletr nica Qu ntica: LASERS ifi.unicamp.br

renardo
Download Presentation

FI-196 Eletr nica Qu ntica: LASERS ifi.unicamp.br

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


    1. 25/8/2012 Flávio Cruz / FI-196 1 FI-196 Eletrônica Quântica: LASERS http://www.ifi.unicamp.br/lasers/FI196 Prof. Flávio C. Cruz flavio@ifi.unicamp.br Tel 3521-5406 Depto de Eletrônica Quântica IFGW/UNICAMP

    2. 25/8/2012 Flávio Cruz / FI-196 2

    3. 25/8/2012 Flávio Cruz / FI-196 3 Aula 1 Introdução História e Aplicações O maser de amônia (NH3) Partes de um laser Tipos de lasers

    4. 25/8/2012 Flávio Cruz / FI-196 4 Bibliografia VERDEYEN, J.T., Laser Electronics, Prentice Hall, 3rd edition, 1995. SIEGMAN, A.E., Lasers, University Science Books, 1986. YARIV, A., Optical Electronics, 1991. YARIV, A., Quantum Electronics, John Wiley & Sons, NY, 3rd edition, 1989. SVELTO, O., Principles of Lasers, Plenum Press, NY, 1976. SARGENT III, M., SCULLY,M.O. & LAMB, W.E., Laser Physics, Addison-Wesley, 6th printing, 1993; etc..

    5. 25/8/2012 Flávio Cruz / FI-196 5 Bibliografia Auxiliar MOORE, J.H., DAVIS, CAPLAN, M.A., Building Scientific Apparatus, 2nd edition, 1989. DEMTRÖDER, W., Laser Spectroscopy, Springer, 1996. FOWLES, G.R., Introduction to Modern Optics, 2nd edition, 1989. FEYNMAN, R., The Feynman Lectures of Physics. Periódicos diversos : OSA: Optics Letters; Optics Express; Applied Optics; Journal of Opticsl Society of America A, B; Optics Communications; Applied Physics; IEEE Journal of Quantum Electronics.

    6. 25/8/2012 Flávio Cruz / FI-196 6 Handbooks, Revistas e Web Sites The Laser Handbook, Vol 1 to 5; (aquisições recentes da biblioteca) Handbook of Lasers; Photonics Spectra, www.photonics.com (revista grátis) Laser Focus World, www.optoelectronics-world.com (revista grátis), optoeletrônica, tecnol. fotônica, aplicações e mercado Lightwave www.lw.pennnet.com , tecnologia de fibras ópticas Physics 2000, http://www.colorado.edu/physics/2000/index.pl , site educacional Fiber Optics Online, www.fiberopticsonline.com Communications Industry Researchers, www.cir-inc.com Optical Society of America, www.osa.org Am. Inst. Physics, www.aip.org , Am. Phys. Society (APS), www.aps.org Sociedade Brasileira de Física, www.sbf.org.br , CBO (comissão brasileira de óptica) IEEE Laser & electro-optics society (LEOS), http://www.ieee.org/portal/site/leos/ Georgia Tech http://www.physics.gatech.edu/people/faculty/rtrebino.html ; usaremos material do Prof. Rick Trebino nas aulas Oregon Center of Optics www.uregon.edu CREOL, http://www.creol.ucf.edu/ Wikipedia, http://www.wikipedia.org/

    7. 25/8/2012 Flávio Cruz / FI-196 7 Conferências SPIE conference: Photonics West (http://spie.org/photonics-west.xml )

    8. 25/8/2012 Flávio Cruz / FI-196 8 Conferências

    9. 25/8/2012 Flávio Cruz / FI-196 9 Avaliação Lista de exercícios (L); Seminários + paper (S); Prova (P) Média Final : MF = 0.4L + 0.3P +0.3 S Conceitos: A: 9-10; B: 7.5-9; C: 6-7.5

    10. 25/8/2012 Flávio Cruz / FI-196 10 Aplicações em Pesquisa Espectroscopia (não-linear, alta resolução, coerente, resolvida no tempo, etc); confinamento e resfriamento de átomos (criação de condensados de Bose-Einstein); microscopia, imagens (OCT) Interferometria: giroscópios (ópticos e atômicos), detecção de ondas gravitacionais; Metrologia de comprimento, tempo e frequência; Controle coerente: controle de reações químicas; Separação de isótopos, purificação; etc..

    11. 25/8/2012 Flávio Cruz / FI-196 11 Aplicações Tecnológicas e Industriais Processamento de materiais, micromecânica; Medidas e inspeção; Leitura, escrita e gravação de informações; Projeção e displays; Comunicações Ópticas; Holografia; Espectroscopia e Química Analítica; Sensoreamento Remoto; Construção Civil; etc..

    12. 25/8/2012 Flávio Cruz / FI-196 12 Faixa Espectral de Lasers

    13. 25/8/2012 Flávio Cruz / FI-196 13 Faixa Espectral de Lasers

    14. 25/8/2012 Flávio Cruz / FI-196 14 Breve Histórico 1930: Toda a teoria necessária já estava pronta. (Maxwell, Planck, Einstein). É preciso a Mecânica Quântica para entender o funcionamento do laser ?

    15. 25/8/2012 Flávio Cruz / FI-196 15 Breve Histórico - continuação 1954: O maser baseado em feixe de NH3 (amônia), desenvolvido na Universidade de Columbia por Charles Townes, James Gordon, Herbert Zeiger, seguidos por Nikolai Basov e Alexander Prokhorov da USSR; f = 24 GHz. MASER : Microwave Amplification by Stimulated Emission by Radiation. (este acrônimo surgiu em 1955). 1954-58: Grande progresso teórico e experimental; Nicolaas Bloembergen em 1956 propõe o maser de 3 níveis para obter a inversão de população.

    16. 25/8/2012 Flávio Cruz / FI-196 16 Histórico 1958 – A.L. Schawlow e C.Townes – importante artigo sobre possibilidade de “maser óptico”. Disputa sobre patente devida a Gordon Gould (estudante de pós na univ. Columbia);

    17. 25/8/2012 Flávio Cruz / FI-196 17 Inventores do laser

    18. 25/8/2012 Flávio Cruz / FI-196 18 1ª Confer. Internac. de Eletrônica Quântica - 1959

    19. 25/8/2012 Flávio Cruz / FI-196 19 Página do Caderno de Laboratório de Townes

    20. 25/8/2012 Flávio Cruz / FI-196 20 Histórico 1960 : Primeiro maser “óptico”, ou laser, demonstrado por Theodore (Ted) H.Maiman, do Hughes Research Center, feito com rubi (Cr3+ : Al2O3) bombeado por lâmpada (f= 432 THz; ?= 694 nm);

    21. 25/8/2012 Flávio Cruz / FI-196 21 Breve Histórico - continuação Uma vez que a teoria estava pronta desde 1930, por que o laser demorou tanto tempo para ser inventado ? Décadas de 60 e 70 em diante - “explosão” da área, com uma infinidade de tipos de lasers demonstrados em laboratório e inúmeros deles produzidos comercialmente; Estágio atual - Ainda caracterizado pelo desenvolvimento tecnológico; melhoramentos em lasers “mais antigos”; cobertura de novas regiões espectrais; novas aplicações.

    22. 25/8/2012 Flávio Cruz / FI-196 22 O Maser de Hidrogênio

    23. 25/8/2012 Flávio Cruz / FI-196 23 O Maser de Hidrogênio

    24. 25/8/2012 Flávio Cruz / FI-196 24 O maser de NH3 (amônia)

    25. 25/8/2012 Flávio Cruz / FI-196 25 NH3 - barreira de potencial

    26. 25/8/2012 Flávio Cruz / FI-196 26 Tunelamento do Átomo de N

    27. 25/8/2012 Flávio Cruz / FI-196 27 Caso Análogo - Dois pêndulos acoplados

    28. 25/8/2012 Flávio Cruz / FI-196 28 Sistema de 2 níveis

    29. 25/8/2012 Flávio Cruz / FI-196 29 Distribuição Térmica

    30. 25/8/2012 Flávio Cruz / FI-196 30 Diagrama Experimental do Maser de NH3

    31. 25/8/2012 Flávio Cruz / FI-196 31 Cavidade de Microondas

    32. 25/8/2012 Flávio Cruz / FI-196 32 Superposição de Estados

    33. 25/8/2012 Flávio Cruz / FI-196 33 Momento de Dipolo Elétrico Oscilante

    34. 25/8/2012 Flávio Cruz / FI-196 34 Condições Ótimas no Maser

    35. 25/8/2012 Flávio Cruz / FI-196 35 Partes de um Laser Meio ativo + mecanismo de bombeamento + cavidade óptica

    36. 25/8/2012 Flávio Cruz / FI-196 36 Perguntas ... Como excitar o sistema para obter o ganho G ? Os espelhos são “especiais” ? Por que os espelhos são curvos ? Por que as janelas tem esta orientação ? Qual a potência que pode ser obtida ? A luz é polarizada? Qual seu espectro? etc...

    37. 25/8/2012 Flávio Cruz / FI-196 37 Alguns Artigos Históricos Gordon, J.P., Zeiger, H.J. and Townes, C.H., Phys.Rev., 99, 1264 (1955). Schawlow, A.L. & Townes, C.H., Infrared and Optical Masers, Phys.Rev. 112:1940, 1958. Maiman, T.H., Stimulated Optical Radiation in Ruby Masers, Nature, 187:493, 1960. Maiman, T.H., Optical and Microwave-Optical Experiments in Ruby, Phys. Rev. Lett., 4:564, 1960. Lamb, W.E. Jr., Theory of an Optical Maser, Phys.Rev., 134:A1429, 1964. De Maria, A.J., Mode Locking, Electronics, Sept.16, p.112, 1968. De Maria, A.J., Picosecond Laser Pulses, Proc.IEEE, 57:3, 1969.

    38. 8/25/2012 Flávio Cruz / FI-196 38 Types of Lasers Solid-state lasers have lasing material distributed in a solid matrix (such as ruby or neodymium:yttrium-aluminum garnet "YAG"). Flash lamps are the most common power source. The Nd:YAG laser emits infrared light at 1.064 nm. Semiconductor lasers, sometimes called diode lasers, are pn junctions. Current is the pump source. Applications: laser printers or CD players. Dye lasers use complex organic dyes, such as rhodamine 6G, in liquid solution or suspension as lasing media. They are tunable over a broad range of wavelengths. Gas lasers are pumped by current. Helium-Neon lases in the visible and IR. Argon lases in the visible and UV. CO2 lasers emit light in the far-infrared (10.6 mm), and are used for cutting hard materials. Excimer lasers (from the terms excited and dimers) use reactive gases, such as chlorine and fluorine, mixed with inert gases such as argon, krypton, or xenon. When electrically stimulated, a pseudo molecule (dimer) is produced. Excimers lase in the UV. Slide provided by Optics I student Kham Ho, 2004Slide provided by Optics I student Kham Ho, 2004

    39. 8/25/2012 Flávio Cruz / FI-196 39 The Ruby Laser

    40. 8/25/2012 Flávio Cruz / FI-196 40 The Helium-Neon Laser

    41. 8/25/2012 Flávio Cruz / FI-196 41 Carbon Dioxide Laser Vibrational energy level diagram depicting the 10.6 micron infrared transition in the carbon dioxide molecule. (The nitrogen vibrational levels shown on the right are used to enhance lasing in laboratory lasers) Image from http://home.achilles.net/~ypvsj/history/mars.htmlVibrational energy level diagram depicting the 10.6 micron infrared transition in the carbon dioxide molecule. (The nitrogen vibrational levels shown on the right are used to enhance lasing in laboratory lasers) Image from http://home.achilles.net/~ypvsj/history/mars.html

    42. 8/25/2012 Flávio Cruz / FI-196 42 CO2 laser in the Martian atmosphere The small red circle centered on Chryse Planitia represents the region over which the laser emissions were detected. Solar radiation is responsible for pumping a population inversion in the carbon dioxide of the tenuous upper levels of the atmosphere of Mars (Mumma et al., 1981) and Venus (Deming et al., 1983). Population inversions have also been found in comets (Mumma, 1993). On mars, the solar pump intensity is strongest near the solar point, and falls off gradually towards the terminator. There is some locus where the inversion vanishes, but it is difficult to say exactly where that is. The R(8) transition at 10.33 microns in the infrared is produced from one vibrational quanta of asymmetric stretching to one quantum of symmetric stretching with a change of one quantum of rotational energy from J=8 to J=7. (mars image courtesy : Philip James, University of Toledo; Steven Lee, University of Colorado; and NASA Hubble Space Telescope) Due to the low densities of the lasing species in the mesosphere and thermosphere of Mars the gain is very low, about 10 percent, comparable to single-pass gains in some earth based CO2 lasers. The low gain is partly compensated by the extremely large volumes of active lasing medium. Over the very long distances scales, the exponential properties of amplified spontaneous emission produce a significant spectral signature at the lasing frequency. The laser amplification has been confirmed by several groups (Gordiets et al., Stepanova et al. and Dickinson et al.) Spectra of martian CO2 emission line as a function of frequency difference from line center (in MHz). Blue profile is the total emergent intensity in the absence of laser emission. Red profile is gaussian fit to laser emission line. Radiation is from a 1.7 arc second beam (half-power width) centered on Chryse Planitia (long +41 lat +23). (Mumma et al., 1981) Image from http://home.achilles.net/~ypvsj/history/mars.html The small red circle centered on Chryse Planitia represents the region over which the laser emissions were detected. Solar radiation is responsible for pumping a population inversion in the carbon dioxide of the tenuous upper levels of the atmosphere of Mars (Mumma et al., 1981) and Venus (Deming et al., 1983). Population inversions have also been found in comets (Mumma, 1993). On mars, the solar pump intensity is strongest near the solar point, and falls off gradually towards the terminator. There is some locus where the inversion vanishes, but it is difficult to say exactly where that is. The R(8) transition at 10.33 microns in the infrared is produced from one vibrational quanta of asymmetric stretching to one quantum of symmetric stretching with a change of one quantum of rotational energy from J=8 to J=7. (mars image courtesy : Philip James, University of Toledo; Steven Lee, University of Colorado; and NASA Hubble Space Telescope) Due to the low densities of the lasing species in the mesosphere and thermosphere of Mars the gain is very low, about 10 percent, comparable to single-pass gains in some earth based CO2 lasers. The low gain is partly compensated by the extremely large volumes of active lasing medium. Over the very long distances scales, the exponential properties of amplified spontaneous emission produce a significant spectral signature at the lasing frequency. The laser amplification has been confirmed by several groups (Gordiets et al., Stepanova et al. and Dickinson et al.) Spectra of martian CO2 emission line as a function of frequency difference from line center (in MHz). Blue profile is the total emergent intensity in the absence of laser emission. Red profile is gaussian fit to laser emission line. Radiation is from a 1.7 arc second beam (half-power width) centered on Chryse Planitia (long +41 lat +23).(Mumma et al., 1981) Image from http://home.achilles.net/~ypvsj/history/mars.html

    43. 8/25/2012 Flávio Cruz / FI-196 43 The Helium Cadmium Laser Text from http://www.shef.ac.uk/physics/teaching/phy332/laser_notes.pdfText from http://www.shef.ac.uk/physics/teaching/phy332/laser_notes.pdf

    44. 8/25/2012 Flávio Cruz / FI-196 44 The Argon Ion Laser Population inversion is achieved in a two step process. First of all, the electrons in the tube collide with argon atoms and ionize them according to the scheme: Ar (ground state) + lots of energetic electrons Þ Ar+ (ground state) + (lots + 1) less energetic electrons . The Ar+ ground state has a long lifetime and some of the Ar+ ions are able to collide with more electrons before recombining with slow electrons. This puts them into the excited states according to: Ar+ (ground state) + high energy electrons Þ Ar+ (excited state) + lower energy electrons . Since there are six 4p levels as compared to only two 4s levels, the statistics of the collisional process leaves three times as many electrons in the 4p level than in the 4s level. Hence we have population inversion. Moreover, cascade transitions from higher excited states also facilitates the population inversion mechanism. The lifetime of the 4p level is 10 ns, which compares to the 1 ns lifetime of the 4s level. Hence we satisfy tupper > tlower and lasing is possible. Table from http://www.eio.com/repairfaq/sam/laserarg.htm#argbcs Energy level diagram from http://www.shef.ac.uk/physics/teaching/phy332/laser_notes.pdf Population inversion is achieved in a two step process. First of all, the electrons in the tube collide with argon atoms and ionize them according to the scheme: Ar (ground state) + lots of energetic electrons Þ Ar+ (ground state) + (lots + 1) less energetic electrons . The Ar+ ground state has a long lifetime and some of the Ar+ ions are able to collide with more electrons before recombining with slow electrons. This puts them into the excited states according to: Ar+ (ground state) + high energy electrons Þ Ar+ (excited state) + lower energy electrons . Since there are six 4p levels as compared to only two 4s levels, the statistics of the collisional process leaves three times as many electrons in the 4p level than in the 4s level. Hence we have population inversion. Moreover, cascade transitions from higher excited states also facilitates the population inversion mechanism. The lifetime of the 4p level is 10 ns, which compares to the 1 ns lifetime of the 4s level. Hence we satisfy tupper > tlower and lasing is possible. Table from http://www.eio.com/repairfaq/sam/laserarg.htm#argbcs Energy level diagram from http://www.shef.ac.uk/physics/teaching/phy332/laser_notes.pdf

    45. 8/25/2012 Flávio Cruz / FI-196 45 The Krypton Ion Laser http://www.eio.com/repairfaq/sam/laserarg.htm#argbcs http://www.lasingonline.com/images/productos/laseres/Gas/297%20mini.jpghttp://www.eio.com/repairfaq/sam/laserarg.htm#argbcs http://www.lasingonline.com/images/productos/laseres/Gas/297%20mini.jpg

    46. 8/25/2012 Flávio Cruz / FI-196 46 Dye lasers Duarte and Piper, Appl. Opt. 23, 1391 1984Duarte and Piper, Appl. Opt. 23, 1391 1984

    47. 8/25/2012 Flávio Cruz / FI-196 47 A dye’s energy levels The lower laser level can be almost any level in the S0 manifold.

    48. 8/25/2012 Flávio Cruz / FI-196 48 Dyes cover the visible, near-IR, and near-UV ranges.

    49. 8/25/2012 Flávio Cruz / FI-196 49 Titanium: Sapphire (Ti:Sapphire) Slide used with permission from Dan MittlemanSlide used with permission from Dan Mittleman

    50. 8/25/2012 Flávio Cruz / FI-196 50 Diode Lasers

    51. 8/25/2012 Flávio Cruz / FI-196 51 Some everyday applications of diode lasers Slide provided by Optics I student Kham Ho, 2004Slide provided by Optics I student Kham Ho, 2004

    52. 8/25/2012 Flávio Cruz / FI-196 52 A laser in space http://home.achilles.net/~ypvsj/news/EtaCarinae.html P Cygni emission line profile of triply ionized carbon at 1548.2 Å in the central star of the cat's eye planetary nebula, NGC 6543. Courtesy of the International Ultraviolet Explorer (IUE). Huggins and Miller were the first to observe the spectra of nova T Coronae Borealis, showing blue-shifted absorption line accompanying each emission line. The nova evolved and they later observed a spectrum characteristic of nebula. These 'P-Cygni' lines are a characteristic common to all novae and stars with strong mass ejections or violent stellar winds such as Eta Carinae. The stellar 'ashes' that accumulate often take the form of a circumstellar nebula of gas and dust. In the late 19th century, Keeler discovered the unusual emission lines of P-Cygni, a variable star which may have had a novae phase in 1600. It had several bright lines ascribed to helium, and is now classified as a very slow nova. A quote from C.S.Beals paper on the interpretation of these stars: Both P-Cygni and Eta Carinae have been numbered among the novae ... This similarity with novae, considered in connection with the absorption on the violet edges of emission lines and the variation in the width of P Cygni lines with wavelength, suggest that the peculiarities in the spectra of these stars is due to the ejection of of gaseous material in a manner similar to that suggested for Wolf-Rayet stars. http://home.achilles.net/~ypvsj/news/EtaCarinae.html P Cygni emission line profile of triply ionized carbon at 1548.2 Å in the central star of the cat's eye planetary nebula, NGC 6543. Courtesy of the International Ultraviolet Explorer (IUE). Huggins and Miller were the first to observe the spectra of nova T Coronae Borealis, showing blue-shifted absorption line accompanying each emission line. The nova evolved and they later observed a spectrum characteristic of nebula. These 'P-Cygni' lines are a characteristic common to all novae and stars with strong mass ejections or violent stellar winds such as Eta Carinae. The stellar 'ashes' that accumulate often take the form of a circumstellar nebula of gas and dust. In the late 19th century, Keeler discovered the unusual emission lines of P-Cygni, a variable star which may have had a novae phase in 1600. It had several bright lines ascribed to helium, and is now classified as a very slow nova. A quote from C.S.Beals paper on the interpretation of these stars: Both P-Cygni and Eta Carinae have been numbered among the novae ... This similarity with novae, considered in connection with the absorption on the violet edges of emission lines and the variation in the width of P Cygni lines with wavelength, suggest that the peculiarities in the spectra of these stars is due to the ejection of of gaseous material in a manner similar to that suggested for Wolf-Rayet stars.

    53. 8/25/2012 Flávio Cruz / FI-196 53 Laser Safety Classifications Slide provided by Optics I student Kham Ho, 2004Slide provided by Optics I student Kham Ho, 2004

More Related