Strap up your safety goggles my siblings, it’s time to lase big-cool

What even is a laser

The word itself stands for “light amplified by stimulated emission” … which explains nothing about what lasers actually are, what they produce and how they work. So let’s start from the beginning. What’s the difference between laser light and “normal” light?

Laser light is coherent and collimated while normal light is incoherent and uncollimated. It’s actually not that hard to understand. Coherence is when a band marches in beat. Incoherence is when you have a crowd of people loudly talking in the background. Collimation is when you walk in a straight line in the same direction as everyone else. Uncollimated people like to follow their own path.

Why does this matter? It matters because laser light sticks together while normal light scatters about. Laser light is a tightly coordinated military parade in tiannamen square while normal light is a bunch of drunk guys after a soccer match.

If I want to send a signal from A to B in 10 seconds, laser light will take it from A to B in 10 seconds. Normal light will take it from A to B and C and D. Some pieces will arrive in 10 seconds, others at 11 seconds, some even at 12.

Cool ass lasers

Double hetero-junction diode lasers:

This image is an electron microscope photo taken on the cross-section of a double hetero-junction diode laser. Despite the name sounding really complex, the concept really just consists of sandwiching one material in between another material. It’s a cheese toast in essence. The “cheese” is InGaAsP (Indium Gallium Arsenide Phosphide) and the “bread” is InP (Indium Phosphide). How does it work? The bread and cheese are designed such that light and electricity get squeezed into the cheese and don’t leak out of it. The laser light travels horizontally through the cheese layer. So you just put electrical energy into this thing and it squeezes out light like a toothpaste bottle wherever you give it an opening.

And yes, you’re seeing this right. The part of the laser that produces light (active layer) is 1.3 microns, or 50 times thinner than human hair. Humanity taught a thing sheet of rust on metal how to think and used that power to make gooner slop. It brings a tear to my eyes.

Dye lasers:

You see that tube with the red liquid on the left side? It’s carrying rhodamine 6G, a fluorescent dye. Ya shine light onto it and it glows yellow. You can see the yellow glow in the center window thing, the upper right corner and in the lower left. You can also see the remnant fluorescent glow as the rhodamine is pumped out through the right tube.

Do I have anything interesting to say about dye lasers? Uh, they can cool themselves. Cause the thing producing light (aka the dye solution) is pumped out. So that’s neat. You can also just read the wiki cause I know little about these types of lasers.

Pulsed lasers with nonsensically high power outputs:

Some lab in Romania genuinely made a laser with 10 petawatts of power. These days you also have lasers which create femtosecond pulses (1 femtosecond is 1 billionth of a nanosecond). In fact, the other day, I did a lab that used femtosecond lasers. My group mate was waving his hand through the laser and we were collecting data on how transparent his hand was (spoiler, his hand wasn’t transparent). Uh … that goes against the laser safety lesson that comes right after … forget I said anything!

Anyway, you wonder how they make these ridiculous lasers? They do it by forcing all the power of the laser into short pulses and releasing it at once.

It’s like basically pressure cooking the laser medium and releasing all the energy in a whistle. This technique is called “Q-switching” (think of “Q” as the energy retention factor. You make it go up to store energy then release). This Q factor technique however only gets you so far. To make real femtosecond lasers you need to do this thing called “mode-locking” which I’m not going to explain.

Just read more at

https://www.rp-photonics.com/q_switching.html

https://www.rp-photonics.com/mode_locked_lasers.html

Laser safety explanation

It’s just a miliwatt laser, what’s the big deal? I have a 60 watt light bulb in my house and I don’t need any special light bulb safety training. Well remember how laser light goes “from A to B” while normal light goes from “A to B and C and D”? Laser light is amazing when “point B” is a communication device. You’re getting the maximum power of the light focused onto the device for it to pick up. That’s not what you want when “point B” is a spot in your retina. You don’t want maximum power focused onto a spot. You want it spread out.

Not to mention, lasers are beams, so the whole power of the laser goes into your eye or onto your skin instead of like, 1% (cause the rest spread out to other parts of the room)

Lasers come in 4 classes (with some subclasses)

Class 1: Harmless under normal use

Class 2: Your reflexes will protect you if it gets into your eye

Class 3R: Harmful if it gets into your eyes

Class 3B: Even reflections and exposure to skin is harmful

Class 4: Can even set fire to things

Classes 1 and 2 also have a special “1M” and “2M” subclass, which means “it’s harmful if you focus the beam into your eyes through some lens”.

The general advice for handling lasers is

  1. Don’t bring reflective or flammable materials into the room
  2. Use specialized laser safety goggles
  3. Don’t enter a room with a turned on laser without authorization (rooms with lasers should have a clear “LASER ON/OFF” sign)
  4. Don’t lean over to get a better look at the laser. The laser should remain below your eye level so it doesn’t accidentally get into your eyes
  5. Keep the emergency number on speed dial

These rules can be relaxed for low class lasers and if the laser is contained inside a fiber, box or other such system.

A source on the medical effects of laser exposure

Medical photos of laser damage to eyes
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Medical injuries
last warning

Retinal burns:

Hemorrhaging:

Blood pool 1 week after injury:

Corneal burns to rabbit (poor rabbit, what asshole got a fucking rabbit involved with lasers?):


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Also, be sure to properly give content warnings and put sensitive subjects behind proper spoiler tags. It’s for the mental health of not just your comrades, but yourself as well.

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spoiler

  • CW dysphoria

    My gender feels like a mess right now. I’m definitely not a guy but feel awkward being called or calling myself a girl. It feels comfortable to be referred to with she/her pronouns but I can’t really see myself as a woman. Now that I’ve accepted myself as trans I’ve started to look back at who I was previously, and how obviously trans younger me was. A lot of my memories are now trans-coded and that gives context for my past, but also brings more questions of my identity as a whole.

    trans-coding in media

    Started watching Evangelion this month for the first time. Leaving thoughts on the show for another time, Shinji felt really trans-coded to me, mainly because some of his behaviour was very trans and what I did when I was younger. I couldn’t really relate to guys and kinda inherited behaviour from girls, something I noticed Shinji do. I haven’t finished the show so I’m leaving any analysis for afterwards but I did see something about Shinji being originally written as a girl.

    • SwitchyandWitchy [she/her]@hexbear.netM
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      17 days ago
      dysphoria, transmisogyny, imposter syndrome

      It took me a while to feel comfortable calling myself a woman. I liked she/her pronouns, I felt unworthy of claiming womanhood, even speaking out the words more quietly when I discussed it with a trusted friend. The latter is ultimately what prompted me examine why I felt that way. I still don’t know for sure, I don’t understand the mechanisms completely. In hindsight it was silly to not feel worthy when I spent so long as a child yearning to be one of the girls. I would’ve long since recognized my own condition in anybody else for what it was: being a trans woman. But I think for me, internalized transmisogyny was a big part. I hated the idea of calling myself a woman when I looked, sounded, and acted like that. I didn’t want to be seen as what the worst parts of my mind would tell me I was: a man in a dress pretending. Even if the rest of me knew that was wrong.

      • spoiler

        I feel uncomfortable not knowing what to call myself, I didn’t ever relate to being a man but not really with being a woman either. I feel stuck in-between them but don’t relate to Non-Binary either. My gender while not something I thought about a lot when I was a child, looking back I felt possibly gender-less and the confusion of ‘oh hey actually there is a big difference between boys and girls, stay on your side’ makes figuring out my gender now very frustrating. Doesn’t help I dress mostly masculine and so get seen as a guy when I’m not, I did dress in an alternative feminine style wearing only skirts, even seen as a girl, though haven’t in ages.

    • Bolshechick [it/its, she/her]@hexbear.net
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      17 days ago
      spoiler

      I use she/her and I’m definitely not a woman either (though I am cool being called a girl).

      You can be non-binary or agender or whatever else and use she/ her if you want to! Use whatever pronouns and labels feel right

    • sodium_nitride [she/her, any]@hexbear.netOP
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      18 days ago

      cuddle

      spoiler

      It is a common trans experience to think that you don’t feel like the gender you are transitioning to. Especially in the early days. This is a kind of imposter syndrome arising from a lack of confidence in yourself. Don’t worry, as time goes on, that feeling of awkwardness will go away and you will feel more comfortable thinking of yourself as a woman.

      Also? Making crackpot theories about characters being secretly trams is fun. My crack theory is that the promised neverland (season 1) is an allegory for being queer in a christian/religious household and the kids being fed to the demons is analogous to the kids being fed to factories/cishet patriarchal marriage/wars.

      • spoiler

        Honestly it doesn’t really feel like a kind of imposter syndrome I just feel awkward that I can’t figure out whatever gender I’ll end up as, but you are right its just time needs to go on.

        I haven’t heard of that show before but that theory might work out? I’m not good at reading subtext or looking further into the meaning of plots (i need to read books more).

        • sodium_nitride [she/her, any]@hexbear.netOP
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          17 days ago
          Tap for spoiler

          Imposter syndrome is the only word I could think of and the closest thing to my experience. If that doesn’t fit you that’s fine. Figuring out the exact source of your awkwardness can take a while.

          I haven’t heard of that show before but that theory might work out?

          It’s pretty good. The first season/comic arc that is. There’s a lot more to the series that makes it so the allegory works. The demon stuff isn’t even the most obvious, it’s just the least spoilery example I could give.