Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 August 2012
In this chapter we shall describe the principle of the operation of lasers, their common features and the properties of the light they emit. Our aim is not to provide an exhaustive catalogue of the types of laser available at the time of writing. Such an account would, in any case, soon be obsolete. Rather, we shall use concrete examples of existing systems to illustrate important features or general principles. We do not want either to give an extensive theoretical description of a laser's properties and of its dynamics. We restrict ourselves here to a rather simplified approach to its main features and refer the reader to more specialized handbooks for further information (see the further reading section at the end of the main chapter).
The physical principles accounting for laser operation can appear quite straightforward. This impression stems from the fact that the essential concepts are now well understood, whilst the detail and some incorrect notions are passed over in silence. It is interesting to note, however, how painstaking our progress in understanding lasers has been. It is usually considered that the prehistory of the laser commenced in 1917 when Einstein introduced the notion of stimulated emission. In fact, Einstein was led to the conclusion that such a phenomenon must occur from considerations of the thermodynamic equilibrium of the radiation field and a sample of atoms at a finite temperature T.
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