Physics, asked by yutikabaar8707, 1 year ago

Role of end mirrors in laser

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Answered by Anonymous
1

hey

Lasers are pumped, so that many electrons already have excited states. In such a situation, when a photon passes through the active material, it's unlikely to be absorbed because there's not enough electrons in non-excited states. Much more likely result is that, by mechanism of stimulated emission, excited electrons can lose their energy, producing a duplicate of the photon which passed by. This happens when passing photon has energy very close to energy of radiative transition from excited state to non-excited.

Mirrors make up the optical cavity, which makes photon travel multiple times across the active material, thus making more and more photons duplicate, resulting in exponential growth of electromagnetic energy, which partially exits the cavity because one (or both) of mirrors are not 100% reflective. And the light which exits is the usable light from laser.

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