Page 5 - Handbook of Lasers
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Preface


                            Lasers continue to be an amazingly robust field of activity, one of continually expanding
                         scientific and technological frontiers. Thus today we have lasing without inversion, quantum
                         cascade lasers, lasing in strongly scattering media, lasing in biomaterials, lasing in photonic
                         crystals, a single atom laser, speculation about black hole lasers, femtosecond-duration laser
                         pulses only a few cycles long, lasers with subhertz linewidths, semiconductor lasers with
                         predicted operating lifetimes of more than 100 years, peak powers in the petawatt regime and
                         planned megajoule pulse lasers, sizes ranging from semiconductor lasers with dimensions of
                         a few microns diameter and a few hundred atoms thick to huge glass lasers with hundreds of
                         beams for inertial confinement fusion research, lasers costing from less than one dollar to
                         more than one billion dollars, and a multibillion dollar per year market.

                            In addition, the nearly ubiquitous presence of lasers in our daily lives attests to the
                         prolific growth of their utilization. The laser is at the heart of the revolution that is marrying
                         photonic and electronic devices. In the past four decades, the laser has become an invaluable
                         tool  for  mankind  encompassing  such  diverse  applications  as  science,  engineering,
                         communications,  manufacturing  and  materials  processing,  medical  therapeutics,
                         entertainment and displays, data storage and processing, environmental sensing, military,
                         energy,  and  metrology.  It  is  difficult  to  imagine  state-of-the-art  research  in  physics,
                         chemistry, biology, and medicine without the use of radiation from various laser systems.

                            Laser action occurs in all states of matter—solids, liquids, gases, and plasmas. Within
                         each category of lasing medium there may be differences in the nature of the active lasing ion
                         or center, the composition of the medium, and the excitation and operating techniques. For
                         some lasers, the periodic table has been extensively explored and exploited; for others—
                         solid-state lasers in particular—the compositional regime of hosts continues to expand. In
                         the case of semiconductor lasers the ability to grow special structures one atomic layer at a
                         time by liquid phase epitaxy, molecular beam epitaxy, and metal-organic chemical vapor
                         deposition  has  led  to  numerous  new  structures  and  operating  configurations,  such  as
                         quantum wells and superlattices, and to a proliferation of new lasing wavelengths. Quantum
                         cascade lasers are examples of laser materials by design.

                            The number and type  of  lasers  and  their  wavelength  coverage  continue  to  expand.
                         Anyone seeking a photon source is now confronted with an enormous number of possible
                         lasers and laser wavelengths. The spectral output ranges of solid, liquid, and gas lasers are
                         shown in Figure 1 and  extend  from  the  soft  x-ray  and  extreme  ultraviolet  regions  to
                         millimeter wavelengths, thus overlapping masers. By using various frequency conversion
                         techniques—harmonic  generation,  parametric  oscillation,  sum-  and  difference-frequency
                         mixing, and Raman shifting—the wavelength of a given laser can be extended to longer and
                         shorter wavelengths, thus enlarging its spectral coverage.
                            This volume seeks to provide a comprehensive, up-to-date compilation of lasers, their
                         properties,  and  original  references  in  a  readily  accessible  form  for  laser  scientists  and
                         engineers and for those contemplating the use of lasers. The compilation also indicates the
                         state of knowledge and development in the field,  provides  a  rapid  means  of  obtaining
                         reference data, is a pathway to the  literature,  contains  data  useful  for  comparison  with
                         predictions  and/or  to  develop  models  of  processes,  and  may  reveal  fundamental
                         inconsistencies or conflicts in the data. It serves an archival function and as an indicator of
                         newly emerging trends.






                         ©2001 CRC Press LLC
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