User:Anthony Salvagno/Notebook/Research/2010/08/23/More laser learning: Difference between revisions

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(New page: {{qd}}We are trying some new methods to characterize our beam. ==Beam Waist== The results we were getting on Fri are consistent with half of what we should be getting. So we think that th...)
 
m (Quick-adding category Optical tweezers (using HotCat))
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==Beam Power==
==Beam Power==
We haven't really measured 2W from this laser yet. We borrowed a power meter from next door and using theirs we got 1.8W and then we tested it on the old laser to see if we could get accurate numbers. We got 2W when the laser was set to 2W. We then calibrated our power meter to give us 2W and tested it at different powers, which we got the correct values for. Finally we measured the new laser and got ~1.7W which isn't great but better than the 1.5 we were reading this morning. By the close of business on Fri we were reading 1.5 as well (which is no good).
We haven't really measured 2W from this laser yet. We borrowed a power meter from next door and using theirs we got 1.8W and then we tested it on the old laser to see if we could get accurate numbers. We got 2W when the laser was set to 2W. We then calibrated our power meter to give us 2W and tested it at different powers, which we got the correct values for. Finally we measured the new laser and got ~1.7W which isn't great but better than the 1.5 we were reading this morning. By the close of business on Fri we were reading 1.5 as well (which is no good).
[[Category:Optical tweezers]]

Revision as of 10:57, 23 August 2010

Template:QdWe are trying some new methods to characterize our beam.

Beam Waist

The results we were getting on Fri are consistent with half of what we should be getting. So we think that the razor blade method actually gives you the beam radius instead of the diameter. Pranav spoke to a friend of his and verified this. We are now trying to measure the beam diameter with a circular aperture instead. We think we can get the proper radius by closing the aperture to get 86% of the power and then measuring that diameter.

  • 45mm away -> 1.6mm diameter

Beam Power

We haven't really measured 2W from this laser yet. We borrowed a power meter from next door and using theirs we got 1.8W and then we tested it on the old laser to see if we could get accurate numbers. We got 2W when the laser was set to 2W. We then calibrated our power meter to give us 2W and tested it at different powers, which we got the correct values for. Finally we measured the new laser and got ~1.7W which isn't great but better than the 1.5 we were reading this morning. By the close of business on Fri we were reading 1.5 as well (which is no good).