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Handbook of Laser Technology and Applications: Lasers: Principles and Operations (Volume One) 2nd edition [Pehme köide]

Edited by (The Institute of Optics, University of Rochester, NY, USA), Edited by
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 556 pages, kõrgus x laius: 280x210 mm, kaal: 453 g, 31 Tables, black and white; 446 Illustrations, black and white
  • Sari: Handbook of Laser Technology and Applications
  • Ilmumisaeg: 04-Oct-2024
  • Kirjastus: CRC Press
  • ISBN-10: 0367649691
  • ISBN-13: 9780367649692
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 556 pages, kõrgus x laius: 280x210 mm, kaal: 453 g, 31 Tables, black and white; 446 Illustrations, black and white
  • Sari: Handbook of Laser Technology and Applications
  • Ilmumisaeg: 04-Oct-2024
  • Kirjastus: CRC Press
  • ISBN-10: 0367649691
  • ISBN-13: 9780367649692

This comprehensive handbook gives a fully updated guide to lasers and laser systems, including the complete range of their technical applications. The first volume outlines the fundamental components of lasers, their properties and working principles. The second volume gives exhaustive coverage of all major categories of lasers, from solid-state and semiconductor diode to fiber, waveguide, gas, chemical, and dye lasers. The third volume covers modern applications in engineering and technology, including all new and updated case studies spanning telecommunications and data storage to medicine, optical measurement, defense and security, nanomaterials processing and characterization.



This comprehensive handbook gives a fully updated guide to lasers and laser technologies, including the complete range of their technical applications. The first volume outlines the fundamental components of lasers, their properties, and working principles.

Key Features:

• Offers a complete update of the original, bestselling work, including many brand-new chapters.

• Deepens the introduction to fundamentals, from laser design and fabrication to host matrices for solid-state lasers, energy level diagrams, hosting materials, dopant energy levels, and lasers based on nonlinear effects.

• Covers new laser types, including quantum cascade lasers, silicon-based lasers, titanium sapphire lasers, terahertz lasers, bismuth-doped fiber lasers, and diode-pumped alkali lasers.

• Discusses the latest applications, e.g., lasers in microscopy, high-speed imaging, attosecond metrology, 3D printing, optical atomic clocks, time-resolved spectroscopy, polarization and profile measurements, pulse measurements, and laser-induced fluorescence detection.

• Adds new sections on laser materials processing, laser spectroscopy, lasers in imaging, lasers in environmental sciences, and lasers in communications.

This handbook is the ideal companion for scientists, engineers, and students working with lasers, including those in optics, electrical engineering, physics, chemistry, biomedicine, and other relevant areas.

Contents

Preface......................................................................
.............................................................................
.......................................... ix

Editors
.............................................................................
.............................................................................
................................... xi

Contributors.................................................................
.............................................................................
.....................................xiii

Part A Principles

1. Laser Principle: Section
Introduction.................................................................
.................................................................. 3

Richard Shoemaker

2. Basic Laser
Principles...................................................................
.............................................................................
............. 5

Christopher C. Davis

3. Interference and
Polarization.................................................................
.............................................................................
53

Alan Rogers

4. Introduction to Numerical Analysis for Laser
Systems......................................................................
.............................. 79

George Lawrence

5. Optical Cavities: Free-Space Laser
Resonators...................................................................
.............................................101

Robert C. Eckardt

6. Optical Cavities: Waveguide Laser
Resonators...................................................................
............................................ 125

Chris Hill

7. Nonlinear
Optics.......................................................................
.............................................................................
............. 139

Orad Reshef and Robert W. Boyd

8. Laser Beam
Control......................................................................
.............................................................................
......... 157

Jacky Byatt

9. Optical Detection and
Noise........................................................................
........................................................................175

Gerald Buller and Jason Smith

10. Laser
Safety.......................................................................
.............................................................................
..................... 193

J. Michael Green and Karl Schulmeister

Part B Laser design and properties

11. Optical Components: Section
Introduction.................................................................
......................................................211

Julian Jones

12. Optical
Components...................................................................
.............................................................................
........... 213

Leo H. J. F. Beckmann

13. Optical Control
Elements.....................................................................
.............................................................................
. 225

Alan Greenaway

14. Adaptive Optics and Phase Conjugate
Reflectors...................................................................
......................................... 233

Michael J. Damzen and Carl Paterson

15. Opto-mechanical
Parts........................................................................
.............................................................................
.. 239

Frank Luecke

16. Optical Pulse Generation: Section
Introduction.................................................................
............................................. 245

Clive Ireland

17. Quasi-cw and Modulated
Beams........................................................................
............................................................... 247

K. Washio

18. Short
Pulses.......................................................................
.............................................................................
..................... 253

Andreas Ostendorf

19. Ultrashort
Pulses.......................................................................
.............................................................................
............. 265

Derryck T. Reid

20. Mode-locking Techniques and
Principles...................................................................
...................................................... 295

Rüdiger Paschotta

21. Attosecond
Metrology....................................................................
.............................................................................
.........313

Pierre Agostini, Andrew J. Piper, and Louis F. DiMauro

22. Chirped Pulse
Amplification................................................................
.............................................................................
. 327

Donna Strickland

23. Optical Parametric
Devices......................................................................
..........................................................................
337

M. Ebrahimzadeh

24. Optical Parametric Chirped-Pulse Amplification
(OPCPA)......................................................................
.................... 369

László Veisz

25. Laser Beam Delivery: Section
Introduction.................................................................
.................................................... 389

Julian Jones

26. Basic
Principles...................................................................
.............................................................................
................... 391

D. P. Hand

27. Free-space
Optics.......................................................................
.............................................................................
............ 397

Leo H. J. F. Beckmann

28. Optical Waveguide
Theory.......................................................................
..........................................................................
423

George Stewart

29. Fibre Optic Beam
Delivery.....................................................................
............................................................................
441

D. P. Hand

30. Positioning and Scanning
Systems......................................................................
...............................................................451

Jürgen Koch

31. Laser Beam Measurement: Section
Introduction.................................................................
........................................... 465

Julian Jones

32. Beam
Propagation..................................................................
.............................................................................
................ 467

B. A. Ward

33. Laser Beam Management
Detectors....................................................................
............................................................. 473

Alexander O. Goushcha and Bernd Tabbert

34. Laser Energy and Power
Measurement..................................................................
.......................................................... 485

Robert K. Tyson

35. Irradiance and Phase Distribution
Measurement..................................................................
......................................... 489

B. Schäfer

36. The Measurement of Ultrashort Laser
Pulses.......................................................................
.......................................... 493

Rick Trebino, Rana Jafari, Peeter Piksarv, Pamela Bowlan, Heli Valtna-Lukner,
Peeter Saari,

Zhe Guang, and Günter Steinmeyer

Index........................................................................
.............................................................................
........................................ 543
Chunlei Guo is a Professor in The Institute of Optics and Physics at the University of Rochester. Before joining the Rochester faculty in 2001, he earned a Ph.D. in Physics from the University of Connecticut and did his postdoctoral training at Los Alamos National Laboratory. His research is in studying femtosecond laser interactions with matter, spanning from atoms and molecules to solid materials. His research at University of Rochester has led to the discoveries of a range of highly functionalized materials through femtosecond laser processing, including the so-called black and colored metals and superhydrophillic and superhydrophobic surfaces. These innovations may find a broad range of applications, and have also been extensively featured by the media, including multiple New York Times articles. Lately, he devoted a significant amount of efforts to developing technologies for global sanitation by working with the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. Through this mission, he visited Africa multiple times to understand humanitarian issues. To further expand global collaboration under the Gates project, he helped establish an international laboratory at Changchun Institute of Optics, Fine Mechanics, and Physics in China. He is a Fellow of the American Physical Society, Optical Society of America, and International Academy of Photonics & Laser Engineering. He has authored about 300 referred journal articles.

Subhash C. Singh is a scientist at the Institute of Optics, University of Rochester and an Associate Professor at Changchun Institute of Optics, Fine Mechanics, and Physics. Dr. Singh earned a Ph.D. in Physics from University of Allahabad, India in 2009. Prior to working with the Guo Lab, he was IRCSETEMPOWER Postdoctoral Research Fellow at Dublin City University, Ireland for 2 years and a DST-SERB Young Scientist at University of Allahabad for 3 years. He has more than 10 years of research experience in the fields of lasermatter interaction, plasma, nanomaterial processing, spectroscopy, energy applications, plasmonics, and photonics. He has published more than 100 research articles in reputable refereed journals and conference proceedings. His past editor experience includes serving as the main editor for Wiley-VCH book Nanomaterials: Processing and Characterization with Lasers and guest editor for special issues of a number of journals.