Development of compact excimer lasers for remote sensing
Abstract
The capabilities of excimer lasers for remote sensing applications are illustrated in a discussion of the development of a compact tunable XeCl excimer laser for the detection of atmospheric OH radicals. Following a brief review of the operating principles and advantages of excimer lasers, measurements of the wavelength dependence of the net small signal gain coefficient of a discharge excited XeCl laser are presented which demonstrate the overlap of several absorption lines of the A-X(0,0) transition of OH near 308 nm with the wavelengths of the XeCl laser. A range of continuous narrow bandwidth tunability of from 307.6 to 308.4 nm with only a 30 percent variation in output is reported for an XeCl laser used as a double-pass amplifier for a frequency-doubled dye laser, and measurements demonstrating the detection of laser-induced fluorescence from OH in a methane-oxygen flame are also noted. The design of an oscillator-amplifier excimer system comprising a corona-preionized, transverse-discharge oscillator and amplifier is then presented. Output energies of 12-15 mJ have been achieved in the regions where injection locking was established, with energies of 8-10 mJ elsewhere.
- Publication:
-
Optical and Laser Remote Sensing
- Pub Date:
- 1983
- Bibcode:
- 1983olrs.book..236L
- Keywords:
-
- Atmospheric Composition;
- Atmospheric Density;
- Excimer Lasers;
- Hydroxyl Radicals;
- Remote Sensing;
- Tunable Lasers;
- Xenon Chloride Lasers;
- Absorption Spectroscopy;
- Fluorescence;
- Injection Lasers;
- Injection Locking;
- Laser Induced Fluorescence;
- Laser Outputs;
- Optical Radar;
- Remote Sensors;
- Ultraviolet Lasers;
- Lasers and Masers