A Level Physics Notes: Optics – The Laser
The word "laser" is an
acronym for Light Amplification by Stimulated Emission of Radiation.
Suppose we have a system with only two available energy levels,
separated by some energy difference which is typically referred to in
terms of the photon energy,
These
two levels are generally referred to as the upper and lower laser
states. When a particle in the upper state interacts with a photon
matching the energy separation of the levels, the particle may decay,
emitting another photon with the same phase and frequency as the
incident photon. Thus we have gotten two photons for the price of
one. This process is known as stimulated emission.
A normal thermal population in any material will have most of the particles in the ground state. However, we would prefer to have most of the particles in the excited state so we can get free photons through stimulated emission. Thus in a laser we strive to create a "population inversion" where most or all of the particles are in the excited state.
This is achieved by adding energy to the laser medium (usually
from an electrical discharge); this process is called pumping. One of
those particles now spontaneously decays back down to its ground
state, emitting a photon of energy
This
photon is of the right frequency to stimulate emission from another
excited state particle, which emits another photon which can
stimulate another excited state particle, and so on.