Article | REF: AF3275 V2

Fundamental Physics of Solid-State Laser-Type Materials

Author: Georges BOULON

Publication date: July 10, 2016

You do not have access to this resource.
Click here to request your free trial access!

Already subscribed? Log in!


Français

1. Context

Most commonly used laser sources
  • Gas lasers

    Excimers: F 2 157 nm, ArF 193 nm, KrCl 222 nm, KrF 249 nm, XeCl 308 nm

    Nitrogen N 2 : 337.1 nm

    Argon: several UV and blue lines, 448.0 nm and 514.5 nm

    Krypton: 461.9 nm; 530.8 nm; 647.1 nm and 676.4 nm

    Helium-neon: 632.8 nm

    CO 2  : 10.6 µm (10,600 nm)

  • Liquid lasers

    Dye lasers cover the entire range from 210 nm to around 900 nm, but with frequency doubling (rhodamine 6G between 546 and 592 nm).

    ...
You do not have access to this resource.

Exclusive to subscribers. 97% yet to be discovered!

You do not have access to this resource.
Click here to request your free trial access!

Already subscribed? Log in!


The Ultimate Scientific and Technical Reference

A Comprehensive Knowledge Base, with over 1,200 authors and 100 scientific advisors
+ More than 10,000 articles and 1,000 how-to sheets, over 800 new or updated articles every year
From design to prototyping, right through to industrialization, the reference for securing the development of your industrial projects

This article is included in

Optics and photonics

This offer includes:

Knowledge Base

Updated and enriched with articles validated by our scientific committees

Services

A set of exclusive tools to complement the resources

Practical Path

Operational and didactic, to guarantee the acquisition of transversal skills

Doc & Quiz

Interactive articles with quizzes, for constructive reading

Subscribe now!

Ongoing reading
Context