The word "LASER" stands for Light Amplification by
Stimulated Emission of Radiation. A laser is an optical light source
that emits a concentrated beam of photons. Lasers are usually
monochromatic – the light that shoots out is usually one wavelength and
color, and is in a narrow beam.
By contrast, light from a regular
incandescent light bulb covers the entire spectrum as well as scatters
all over the room. (Which is good, because could you light up a room
with a narrow beam of light?)
There are about a hundred different
types of atoms in the entire universe, and they are always vibrating,
moving, and rotating. Think of kids on sugar. When you add energy to
these atoms (even more sugar to the kids), they really get excited and
bounce all over the place.
When the atoms relax back down tot
heir "normal" state, they emit a photon (a light particle). Think of
the kids as coming down from their sugar high, and they all collapse on
the couch.
A laser controls the way energized atoms release
photons. Imagine giving half the kids sugar, and picture how they would
bounce all over the place (like light from a bulb)when it took effect.
They would be very high-energy among the other half who were contently
sitting down.
Now imagine those sugar kids jumping in unison (a
focused laser beam). The sugar-kids are infectious, and pretty soon,
the kids around them are joining in and sharing in their excited
energy. This is how a laser charges the atoms inside the gas medium.
Now
imagine a cat-flap that lets out a limited number of kids out at a
time, while the rest are bouncing around inside, charging up everyone.
That cat-flap exit is the laser beam exiting the laser. The atoms
remaining inside the laser bounce off mirrors as they charge each other
up.
Before we start, you'll need eye protection – tinted UV ski
goggles are great to use, as are large-framed sunglasses, but
understand that these methods of eye protection will not protect your
eyes from a direct beam. They are intended as a general safety
precaution against laser beam scatter and spinning mirrors. (Yes, you
will be wearing sunglasses in the dark!)
A very neat addition to
the experiments below is a fog machine. (Rent one from your local party
supply store.) Turn it on, be sure you have good ventilation, darken
the lights, and turn on the lasers for an outstanding laser experience!
A
quick note about lasers: keychain lasers from the dollar store work
just fine with these projects. Do not use the green lasers sold in
astronomy stores – they are too dangerous for the eyes.
Plastic
Bottle Beam: Fill up a plastic water or clean soda bottle with water
and add a sprinkle of cornstarch. Turn down the lights and turn up the
laser, aiming the beam through the bottle. Do you see the original beam
in the bottle? Can you find the reflection beam and the pass-through
beam?
Light Bulb Laser: In the dark, aim your laser at a frosted
incandescent light bulb. The bulb will glow and have several internal
reflections! What other types of light bulbs work well?
CDs:
Shine your beam over the surface of an old CD or DVD. Does it work
better with a scratched or smoother surface? You should see between
5-13 reflections off the surface of the CD, depending on where you
shine it and how good your "seeing" conditions are.
Glass and
Crystal: Pass the laser beam through several cut-crystal objects such
as wine glasses or clear glass vases. Is there a difference between
clear plastic or glass, smooth or multi-faceted? Try an ice cube, both
frosted and wet.
Lenses: If you have an old pair of eyeglasses,
pop out the lenses and try one or both in the beam to see the various
effects. Try one lens, and then try two in line with each other to see
if you can change the beam. If you have polarizer filters, use two. You
can substitute two sunglass lenses – no need to pop out the lenses –
you can just use two pairs of sunglasses. Just make sure they are
polarized lenses (most UV sunglasses are). Place both lenses in the
beam and rotate one 90 degrees. The lenses should block the light
completely in one configuration and allow it to pass-through the other
way.
Since
1996, Aurora Lipper has been helping families learn science. As a
pilot, astronomer, engineer, rocket scientist, and former university
instructor, Aurora can transform toilet paper tubes into real working
radios and make robots from junk in the back desk drawer. You can
download the free science experiment workbook at http://www.SuperchargedScience.com