Abstract
At NIST in Boulder we have been pursuing an active research program developing diode-laser technology for scientific applications. Commercial diode lasers are readily available in a few wavelength bands in the red and near IR region of the spectrum. Our work has focused on the AlGaAs, InGaAlP, and InGaAsP lasers that operate at room temperature in the red and near IR region of the spectrum between 650 nm and 1.5 microns. These lasers have a number of recognized advantages, including: high efficiency, low cost, tunability, and moderate power levels (~1 to 100 mW). Increasing interest in applying diode lasers to science in general and spectroscopy in particular has stimulated a number of recent reviews on the subject.1–4
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Fox, R. et al. (1993). Diode Lasers and Metrology. In: Inguscio, M., Wallenstein, R. (eds) Solid State Lasers. NATO ASI Series, vol 317. Springer, Boston, MA. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4615-2998-9_19
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4615-2998-9_19
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