Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { ?s ?p "A nitrogen laser is a gas laser operating in the ultraviolet range (typically 337.1 nm) using molecular nitrogen as its gain medium, pumped by an electrical discharge.The wall-plug efficiency of the nitrogen laser is low, typically 0.1% or less, though nitrogen lasers with efficiency of up to 3% have been reported in the literature. The wall-plug efficiency is the product of the following three efficiencies: electrical: TEA laser gain medium: This is the same for all nitrogen lasers and thus has to be at least 3% inversion by electron impact is 10 to 1 due to Franck–Condon principle energy lost in the lower laser level: 40% optical: More induced emission than spontaneous emission↑"@en }
Showing triples 1 to 2 of
2
with 100 triples per page.
- Nitrogen_laser abstract "A nitrogen laser is a gas laser operating in the ultraviolet range (typically 337.1 nm) using molecular nitrogen as its gain medium, pumped by an electrical discharge.The wall-plug efficiency of the nitrogen laser is low, typically 0.1% or less, though nitrogen lasers with efficiency of up to 3% have been reported in the literature. The wall-plug efficiency is the product of the following three efficiencies: electrical: TEA laser gain medium: This is the same for all nitrogen lasers and thus has to be at least 3% inversion by electron impact is 10 to 1 due to Franck–Condon principle energy lost in the lower laser level: 40% optical: More induced emission than spontaneous emission↑".
- Q1296457 abstract "A nitrogen laser is a gas laser operating in the ultraviolet range (typically 337.1 nm) using molecular nitrogen as its gain medium, pumped by an electrical discharge.The wall-plug efficiency of the nitrogen laser is low, typically 0.1% or less, though nitrogen lasers with efficiency of up to 3% have been reported in the literature. The wall-plug efficiency is the product of the following three efficiencies: electrical: TEA laser gain medium: This is the same for all nitrogen lasers and thus has to be at least 3% inversion by electron impact is 10 to 1 due to Franck–Condon principle energy lost in the lower laser level: 40% optical: More induced emission than spontaneous emission↑".