Increasing Laser Power - Can Mirrors Create Infinite Power?

In summary, one can use lasers as optical amplifiers, but doing so will not create more light. Furthermore, be very careful when working with lasers as they can be very dangerous if not used correctly.
  • #1
relativelyslow
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if you take a laser and shine it into another set of mirrors so that the light shoots out of the opposite end through which the laser first went into the second set of mirrors, would it be more powerful than when it started (the second set of mirrors would have a lasing medium)? if so, could you do this infinitely for infinite power?
 
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  • #2
No, this will not work. you can not create more light, you can also not destroy the light. the light there is will all there ever will be, and it will eventually diverge so it is not visible at all.
 
  • #3
wouldn't you be creating more light by exciting the second lasing medium (sort of shining two lasers in one beam)?
 
  • #4
If the return beam is out of phase with the beam in the cavity you could well lose power (this is the most likely event). If the lasing medium is already maintaining the maximum level of pumped atoms (maximum population inversion) there is no way that you well be able generate more photons. Thus no gain and only the high probability of deteriorating overall beam quality.
 
  • #5
if the first laser excited the lasing medium, would the resulting "second" laser be in sync?
the contraption I am thinking of is not a closed beam of light. the first laser would shine into a one way mirror so that it goes in but cannot (at least mostly) escape back through it. then it excites the lasing medium in the second part. the newly combined laser would work the same way as in the first part (photons bounce back and forth in between the mirrors until they produce a coherent beam). set up like this would it work?
 
  • #6
I'm just guessing here but I mabye you could reflect a beam of light in such a way that you "store" it in a mirror loop and over time add more and more light waves into the loop. Then once you have enough light in the loop you remove one of the mirrors and allow all the light to leave at once producing a denser ray of photons.
 
  • #7
You can use one laser as a stimulus for another lasing medium, fine -- but you're not creating any energy by doing so. The energy given up by the second lasing medium comes from whatever pump mechanism is responsible for producing its population inversion, just like the energy from the first laser.

You can't beat the conservation of energy.

- Warren
 
  • #8
ok. thanks. that makes sense (its good to have people who remember the laws, no matter how basic they are). so the laser cannot be the stimulus to the second laser; at least without losing its energy. what if the second laser was excited by an outside source (probably much like the first one). could the first laser mesh with the second one and strengthen?
 
  • #9
As I said, one laser can certainly provide the stimulus for another. You can "amplify" a laser pulse this way -- but again, you're not getting something for nothing. Each amplifier stage uses more energy than it produces in light output.

- Warren
 
  • #10
getting something from nothing wasn't my goal; sorry if i made that confusing. my objective was to find out if you could increase a lasers power, essentially, by adding more and more lasers to each other
 
  • #11
Yes, you can use lasers as optical amplifiers. That much should be apparent by the name LASER itself: Light Amplification by Stimulated Emission of Radiation.

- Warren
 
  • #12
yeah i guess. so when the lasers are mixed, they should mix constructively (not destructively)?
 
  • #13
Well, if you shine coherent light into a lasing medium, you're guaranteed that the stimulated emission will have the same phase and also be coherent.

- Warren
 
  • #14
ok. well thanks for clearing up what should have already been clear. i think I am going to have to try this. I've been interested in building a laser from "scratch". "scratch" because ill use already made tubes. if you did this enough with an HeNe laser, would it be able to cut throught things (at least set fire to paper)?
 
  • #15
It depends on the kind of lasers you have. You can't just daisy-chain ten 1 mW lasers and hope to get more than 1 mW out of the final laser. Last but not least, please be very careful -- lasers with enough power to burn things are not exactly the sort of things you should be playing with at your level of understanding. I recommend you get some training first.

- Warren
 
  • #16
i know. I've been reading this website called sams laser FAQ. it has pretty much everything you need to know about lasers. i wouldn't set out to burn things with it right away. id need a working one first. it would just be cool. do they have radio lasers? that would be really cool for some reason...even though you can't see the beam (visually).

about the daisy chaining, i thought that whole stuff about amplification said i could make it more powerful
 
  • #17
relativelyslow said:
yeah i guess. so when the lasers are mixed, they should mix constructively (not destructively)?
If, as you first mentioned, you simply reflect a beam back into itself there is NO guarantee that you will be in phase with the beam in the laser tube.

As I tried to say before, there is fixed number of photons available for lasing in ANY laser, if you are already operating near that maximum limit further stimulation will NOT help. The way to get more power out is to increase the number of electrons in the inverted population. What you want to do is find a way to pump more electrons into the excited state, then you will increase the power out. Of course laser tubes are designed to run at some maximum power, if you find a way to push them beyond that limit you may find that the optics will fail, since they can be power sensitive. Any mirror adsorbs a small percentage of the incident beam, if you increase beam power you increase the temperature of the mirror, failure can result.
I've been interested in building a laser from "scratch". "scratch" because ill use already made tubes.
Then your project will be to build a power supply, not a laser!
 
  • #18
im assuming lasers need a power supply. I am just saying what sams laser faq is suggesting. its probably telling me how to build both.
 

Related to Increasing Laser Power - Can Mirrors Create Infinite Power?

1. How do mirrors increase laser power?

Mirrors can increase laser power by reflecting and intensifying the light produced by the laser. As the laser light bounces between the mirrors, it becomes more concentrated and powerful.

2. Can mirrors create infinite laser power?

No, mirrors cannot create infinite laser power. While they can amplify and concentrate the laser light, there are limitations to the laser's power output and the reflective capabilities of the mirrors.

3. What factors affect the power of a laser reflected by mirrors?

The power of a laser reflected by mirrors can be affected by a variety of factors, including the quality of the mirrors, the angle of reflection, and the type of laser being used.

4. Are there any risks to increasing laser power with mirrors?

Yes, increasing laser power with mirrors can be dangerous if proper precautions are not taken. The intense beam of light can cause eye and skin damage, and the heat generated by the laser can also be a fire hazard.

5. How can we control the power of a laser reflected by mirrors?

The power of a laser reflected by mirrors can be controlled by adjusting the distance between the mirrors, changing the angle of reflection, or using optical filters to limit the intensity of the light.

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