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  • Hey it's me, Destin. Welcome to Smarter Every Day.

  • So I'm in the Netherlands today

  • and I'm hanging out with a buddy of mine that I met through a research project.

  • His name is Johan Kr...

  • - Reinink. - That.

  • So, anyway, Johan is a laser expert,

  • and I've worked with him on stuff on the Internet.

  • So we're going to show you how lasers work today.

  • [Music]

  • (Destin) So this is an open cavity laser, and

  • can you explain the main components of an open cavity laser?

  • - Here we have the laser tube,

  • with a helium-neon gas that amplifies the light,

  • and we have at both ends mirrors that are aligned to bounce the light back and forth.

  • - Should we fire it up? - Definitely.

  • [Click]

  • (Johan) There's a 4 second delay. It's a safety feature.

  • - Alright. Sweet.

  • (Johan) Well a helium-neon laser tube is just a glorified neon light.

  • It's just... you have the electrical discharge going through it,

  • like a neon sign,

  • And the special thing is you have here two aperatures,

  • and the light can bounce straight through.

  • So at both sides of the laser tube we've placed two high reflecting mirrors,

  • and the light that goes through the laser tube hits the mirror

  • and bounces back in forth through the tube.

  • And each time it passes the tube it gets amplified.

  • You make this mirror slightly transparent - it's 2% transparent -

  • and each time the light passes,

  • 2% moves out and you have, like, a beam going on here.

  • - Okay, so basically what comes out the other end of the mirror

  • is the imperfection in the mirror.

  • If it was a perfect mirror we wouldn't get any output from the laser, correct?

  • - Correct. - But because the mirrors are imperfect

  • we do get a little lasing. - Yep.

  • In this case, the laser is just specifically made to reflect only 98%,

  • and this is the 2% of the light that comes out.

  • (Destin) Alright, one thing I've noticed is that inside the cavity

  • the beam is much stronger.

  • You can see the laser hitting particles in the air.

  • But downstream the photons that are leaking out of the mirror...

  • It's not quite as strong. Is that correct? - Yeah.

  • The light circulating inside the laser is far higher intensity.

  • And if you hold your hand outside of the laser and block the beam,

  • you see that you catch the beam. It looks pretty nice.

  • But if you hold your hand inside the cavity,

  • you'll block the laser from amplifying all the light

  • and the light won't circulate around, and you don't have a laser anymore.

  • (Destin) So it stops way on the other side.

  • Even though we're stopping it on this side of the tube,

  • we don't get lasing on the other side.

  • I'm waiting on photon torpedo technology myself, so...

  • - I'm working on it. - You're working on it? Excellent.

  • But anyway, we want to thank Johan for his time,

  • and uh... can you thank the people who let us in, in Dutch?

  • - Absolutely.

  • (Destin) What... did you just call me something?

  • - Nee... absolutely not. [Both laugh]

  • (Destin) Do you wanna get even smarter?

  • Then check out this video by MinutePhysics.

  • Henry explains what's going on inside that helium-neon tube

  • in one of his cool science videos.

  • [Music]

  • (Destin) We're going to do Laser Month.

  • Laser Month consists of a lot of videos shot over here in Holland with Johan,

  • Because he is a laser genius. Can I call you a laser genius?

  • - Definitely. [Destin laughs]

  • Alright, so now we're going to play laser limbo, ready?

  • - No. - Why not?

  • - It's dangerous. - Aw, c'mon, laser limbo.

  • Captioning in different languages welcome. Please contact Destin if you can help.

Hey it's me, Destin. Welcome to Smarter Every Day.

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