Glossary of Laser Terms

Excerpted from Appendix A of the OSHA Publication 8-1.7: Guidelines for Laser Safety & Hazard Assessment. laser symbol

ABSORB
To transform radiant energy into a different form, with a resultant rise in temperature.

ABSORPTION
Transformation of radiant energy to a different form of energy by the interaction of matter, depending on temperature and wavelength.

ABSORPTION COEFFICIENT
Factor describing light's ability to be absorbed per unit of path length.

ACCESSIBLE EMISSION LEVEL
The magnitude of accessible laser (or collateral) radiation of a specific wavelength or emission duration at a particular point as measured by appropriate methods and devices. Also means radiation to which human access is possible in accordance with the definitions of the laser's hazard classification.

ACCESSIBLE EMISSION LIMIT (AEL)
The maximum accessible emission level permitted within a particularly class. In ANSI Z- 136.1, AEL is determined as the product of Accessible Emission Maximum Permissible Exposure limit (MPE) and the area of the limiting aperture (7mm for visible and near infrared lasers).

ACTIVE MEDIUM
Collection of atoms or molecules capable of undergoing stimulated emission at a given wavelength.

AFOCAL
Literally, "without a focal length"; an optical system with its object and image point at infinity.

AIMING BEAM
A laser (or other light source) used as a guide light. Used coaxially with infrared or other invisible light may also be a reduced level of the actual laser used for surgery or for other applications.

AMPLIFICATION
The growth of the radiation field in the laser resonator cavity. As the light wave bounces back and forth between the cavity mirrors, it is amplified by stimulated emission on each pass through the active medium.

AMPLITUDE
The maximum value of the electro-magnetic wave, measured from the mean to the extreme; simply stated: the height of the wave.

ANGLE OF INCIDENCE
See Incident Ray .

ANGSTROM UNIT
A unit of measure of wavelength dual to 10(-10) meter, 0.1 nanometer, or 10(-4) micrometer, no longer widely used nor recognized in the SI system of units.

ANODE
An electrical element in laser excitation which attracts electrons from a cathode.

APERTURE
An opening through which radiation can pass.

APPARENT VISUAL ANGLE
The angular subtense of the source as calculated from the source size and distance from the eye. It is not the beam divergence of the source.

AR COATINGS
Antireflection coatings used on optical components to suppress unwanted reflections.

ARGON
A gas used as a laser medium. It emits blue/green light primarily at 448 and 515 nm.
ARTICULATED ARM CO(2) laser beam delivery device consisting of a series of hollow tubes and mirrors interconnected in such a manner as to maintain alignment of the laser beam along the path of the arm.

ATTENUATION
The decrease in energy (or power) as a beam passes through an absorbing or scattering medium.

AUTOCOLLIMATOR
A single instrument combining the functions of a telescope and a collimator to detect small angular displacements of a mirror by means of its own collimated light.

AVERAGE POWER
The total energy imparted during exposure divided by the exposure duration.

AVERSION RESPONSE
Movement of the eyelid or the head to avoid an exposure to a noxious stimulant, bright light. It can occur within 0.25 seconds, and it includes the blink reflex time.

AXIAL-FLOW LASER
A laser in which an axial flow of gas is maintained through the tube to replace those gas molecules depleted by the electrical discharge used to excite the gas molecules to the lasing. See gas discharge laser.

AXICON LENS
A conical lens which, when followed by a conventional lens, can focus laser light to a ring shape.

AXIS, OPTICAL AXIS
The optical centerline for a lens system; the line passing through the centers of curvature of the optical surfaces of a lens.

BEAM
A collection of rays that may be parallel, convergent, or divergent.

BEAM BENDER
A hardware assembly containing an optical device, such as a mirror, capable of changing the direction of a laser beam; used to repoint the beam, and in "folded," compact laser systems.

BEAM DIAMETER
The distance between diametrically opposed points in the cross section of a circular beam where the intensity is reduced by a factor of e(-1) (0.368) of the level (for safety standards). The value is normally chosen at e(-2) (0.135) of the peak level for manufacturing specifications.

BEAM DIVERGENCE
Angle of beam spread measured in radians more milliradians (1 milliradian = 3.4 minutes-of-arc or approximately 1 mil). For small angles where the cord is approximately equal to the arc, the beam divergence can be closely approximated by the ratio of the cord length (beam diameter) divided by the distance (range) from the laser aperture.

BEAM EXPANDER
An optical device that increases beam diameter while decreasing beam divergence (spread). In its simplest form consists of two lenses, the first to diverge the beam and the second to re-collimate it. Also called an upcollimator.

BEAM SPLITTER
An optical device using controlled reflection to produce two beams from a single incident beam.

BLINK REFLEX
See aversion response.

BREWSTER WINDOWS
The transmissive end (or both ends) of the laser tube, made of transparent optical material and set at Brewster's angle in gas lasers to achieve zero reflective loss for one axis of plane polarized light. They are non-standard on industrial lasers, but a must if polarization is desired.

BRIGHTNESS
The visual sensation of the luminous intensity of a light source. The brightness of a laser beam is most closely associated with the radio-metric concept of radiance.

C.I.E.
Abbreviation for Commission International de l'Eclairage, the French translation for: International Commission on Illumination.

CALORIMETER
An instrument which measures the energy, usually as heat generated by absorption of the laser beam.

CARBON DIOXIDE
Molecule used as a laser medium. Emits far energy at 10,600 nm (10.6 microns).

CATHODE
A negatively charged electrical element providing electrons for an electrical discharge.

CLOSED INSTALLATION
Any location where lasers are used which will be closed to unprotected personnel during laser operation.

CO(2) LASER
A widely used laser in which the primary lasing medium is carbon dioxide gas. The output wavelength is 10.6 microns (10600 nm) in the far infrared spectrum. It can be operated in either CW or pulsed.

COAXIAL GAS
A shield of inert gas flowing over the target material to prevent plasma oxidation and absorption, blow away debris, and control heat reaction. The gas jet has the same axis as the beam,so the two can be aimed together.

COHERENCE
A term describing light as waves which are in phase in both time and space. Monochromaticity and low divergence are two properties of coherent light.

COLLIMATED LIGHT
Light rays that are parallel. Collimated light is emitted by many lasers. Diverging light may be collimated by a lens or other device.

COLLIMATION
Ability of the laser beam to not spread significantly (low divergence) with distance.

COMBINER MIRROR
The mirror in a laser which combines two or more wavelengths into a coaxial beam.

CONTINUOUS MODE
The duration of laser exposure is controlled by the user (by foot or hand switch).

CONTINUOUS WAVE (CW)
Constant, steady-state delivery of laser power.

CONTROLLED AREA
An locale where the activity of those within are subject to control and supervision for the purpose of laser radiation hazard protection.

CONVERGENCE
The bending of light rays toward each other, as by a positive (convex) lens.

CORRECTED LENS
A compound lens that is made measurably free of aberrations through the careful selection of its dimensions and materials.

CRYSTAL
A solid with a regular array of atoms. Sapphire (Ruby Laser) and YAG (Nd:YAG laser) are two crystalline materials used as laser sources.

CURRENT REGULATION
Laser system regulation in which discharge current is kept constant.

CURRENT SATURATION
The maximum flow of electric current in a conductor; in a laser, the point at which further electrical input will not increase laser output.

CW
Abbreviation for continuous wave; the continuous-emission mode of a laser as opposed to pulsed operation.

DEPTH OF FIELD
The working range of the beam in or near the focal plane of a lens; a function of wavelength, diameter of the unfocused beam, and focal length of the lens.

DEPTH OF FOCUS
The distance over which the focused laser spot has a constant diameter and thus constant irradiance.

DICHROIC FILTER
Filter that allows selective transmission of colors desired wavelengths.

DIFFRACTION
Deviation of part of a beam, determined by the wave nature of radiation and occurring when the radiation passes the edge of an opaque obstacle.

DIFFUSE REFLECTION
Takes place when different parts of a beam incident on a surface are reflected over a wide range of angles in accordance with Lambert's Law. The intensity will fall-off as the inverse of the square of the distance away from the surface and also obey a Cosine Law of reflection.

DIFFUSER
An optical device or material that homogenizes the output of light causing a very smooth, scattered, even distribution over the area affected. The intensity will obey Lambert's law (see Diffuse Reflection).

DIVERGENCE
The increase in the diameter of the laser beam with distance from the exit aperture. The value gives the full angle at the point where the laser radiant exposure or irradiance is e(-1) or e(-2) of the maximum value, depending upon which criteria is used.

DOSIMETRY
Measurement of the power, energy, irradiance or radiant exposure of light delivered are two crystalline materials used as laser to tissue.

DRIFT
All undesirable variations in output either amplitude or frequency).

ANGULAR DRIFT
Any unintended change in direction of the beam before, during, and after warmup; measured in mrad.

DUTY CYCLE
Ratio of total "on" duration to total exposure duration for a repetitively pulsed laser.

ELECTRIC VECTOR
The electric field associated with a light wave which has both direction and amplitude.

ELECTROMAGNETIC RADIATION
The propagation of varying electric and magnetic fields through space at the velocity of light.

ELECTROMAGNETIC SPECTRUM
The range of frequencies and wavelengths emitted by atomic systems. The total spectrum includes radiowaves as well as short cosmic rays. Wavelengths cover a range from 1 hz to perhaps as high as 1020 hz.

ELECTROMAGNETIC WAVE
A disturbance which propagates outward from an electric charge that oscillates or is accelerated. Includes radio waves; X-rays; gamma rays; and infrared, ultraviolet, and visible light.

ELECTRON
Negatively charged particle of an atom.

EMBEDDED LASER
A laser with an assigned class number higher than the inherent capability of the laser system in which it is incorporated, where the systems lower classification is appropriate to the engineering features limiting accessible emission.

EMERGENT BEAM DIAMETER
Diameter of the laser beam at the exit aperture of the system in centimeters (cm) defined at e(-1) or e(-2) irradiance points.

EMISSION
Act of giving off radiant energy by an atom or molecule.

EMISSIVITY
The ratio of the radiant energy emitted by a any source to that emitted by a blackbody at the same temperature.

EMITTANCE
The rate at which emission occurs.

ENCLOSED LASER DEVICE
Any laser or laser system located within an enclosure which does not permit hazardous optical radiation emission from the enclosure. The laser inside is termed an "embedded laser."

ENERGY
The product of power (watts) and duration (seconds). One watt second = one Joule.

ENERGY (Q)
The capacity for doing work. Energy is commonly used to express the output from pulsed lasers and it is generally measured in Joules (J). The product of power (watts) and duration (seconds). One watt second = one Joule.

ENERGY SOURCE
High voltage electricity, radiowaves, flashes of light, or another laser used to excite the laser medium.

ENHANCED PULSING
Electronic modulation of a laser beam to produce high peak power at the initial stage of the pulse. This allows rapid vaporization of the material without heating the surrounding area. Such pulses are many times the peak power of the CW mode (also called "Superpulse").

ETALON
A Fabry-Perot interferometer with a fixed air gap separation. Such a device also serves as a basic laser resonant cavity.

EXCIMER "EXCITED DIMER."
A gas mixture used as the active medium in a family of lasers emitting ultraviolet light.

EXCITATION
Energizing a material into a state of population inversion.

EXCITED STATE
Atom with an electron in a higher energy level than it normally occupies.

EXEMPTED LASER PRODUCT
In the U.S., a laser device exempted by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration from all or some of the requirements of 21 CFR 1040.

EXTENDED SOURCE
An extended source of radiation can be resolved into a geometrical image in contrast with a point source of radiation, which cannot be resolved into a geometrical image. A light source whose diameter subtends a relatively large angle from an observer.

F-NUMBER
The focal length of lens divided by its usable diameter. In the case of a laser the usable diameter is the diameter of the laser beam or a smaller aperture which restricts a laser beam.

FABRY-PEROT INTERFEROMETER
Two plane, parallel partially reflective optically flat mirrors placed with a small air gap separation (1-20 mm) so as to produce interference between the light waves (interference fringes) transmitted with multiple reflections through the plate.

FAILSAFE INTERLOCK
An interlock where the failure of a single mechanical or electrical component of the interlock will cause the system to go into, or remain in, a safe mode.

FEMTOSECONDS
10(-15) seconds.

FIBEROPTICS
A system of flexible quartz or glass fibers with internal reflective surfaces that pass light through thousands of glancing (total internal) reflections.

FLASHLAMP
A tube typically filled with Krypton or Xenon. Produces a high intensity white light in short duration pulses.

FLUORESCENCE
The emission of light of a particular wavelength resulting from absorption of energy typically from light of shorter wavelengths.

FLUX
The radiant, or luminous, power of a light beam; the time rate of the flow of radiant energy across a given surface.

FOCAL LENGTH
Distance between the center of a lens and the point on the optical axis to which parallel rays of light are converged by the laser.

FOCAL POINT
That distance from the focusing lens where the laser beam has the smallest diameter.

FOCUS
As a noun, the point where rays of light meet which have been reflected by a mirror or refracted by a lens, giving rise to an image of the source. As a verb, to adjust focal length for the clearest image and smallest spot size.

FOLDED RESONATOR
Construction in which the interior optical path is bent by mirrors; permit compact packaging of a long laser cavity.

FREQUENCY
The number of light waves passing a fixed point in a given unit of time, or the number of complete vibrations in that period.

GAIN
Another term for amplification.

GAS DISCHARGE LASER
A laser containing a gaseous lasing medium in a glass tube in which a constant flow of gas replenishes the molecules depleted by the electricity or chemicals used for excitation.

GAS LASER
A type of laser in which the laser action takes place in a gas medium.

GATED PULSE
A discontinuous burst of laser light, made by timing (gating) a continuous wave output - usually in fractions of a second.

GAUSSIAN CURVE NORMAL
Statistical curve showing a peak with even distribution on either side. May either be a sharp peak with steep sides, or a blunt peak with shallower sides. Used to show power distribution in a beam. The concept is important in controlling the geometry of the laser impact.

GROUND STATE
Lowest energy level of an atom.

HALF-POWER POINT
The value on either the leading or trailing edge of a laser pulse at which the power is one-half of its maximum value.

HEAT SINK
A substance or device used to dissipate or absorb unwanted heat energy.

HELIUM-NEON (HeNe) LASER
A laser in which the active medium is a mixture of helium and neon. Its wavelength is usually in the visible range. Used widely for alignment, recording, printing, and measuring.

HERTZ (Hz)
Unit of frequency in the International System of Units (SI), abbreviated Hz; replaces cps for cycles per second.

HOLOGRAM
A photographic film or plate containing interference patterns created by the coherence of laser light. A three dimensional image may be reconstructed from a hologram. Here are transmission, reflection or integral holograms.

IMAGE
The optical reproduction of an object, produced by a lens or mirror. A typical positive lens converges rays to form a "real" image which can be photographed. A negative lens spreads rays to form a "virtual" image which can't be projected.

INCIDENT LIGHT
A ray of light that falls on the surface of a lens or any other object. The "angle of incidence" is the angle made by the ray with a perpendicular to the surface.

INFRARED RADIATION (IR)
Invisible Electromagnetic radiation with wavelengths which lie within the range of 0.70 to 1000 microns. These wavelengths are often broken up into regions: IR-A (0.7-1.4 microns), IR-B (1.4-3.0 microns) and IR-C (3.0-1000 microns).

INTEGRATED RADIANCE
Product of the exposure duration times the radiance. Also known as pulsed radiance.

INTENSITY
The magnitude of radiant energy.

INTRABEAM VIEWING
The viewing condition whereby the eye is exposed to all or part of a direct laser beam or a specular reflection.

ION LASER
A type of laser employing a very high discharge current, passing down a small bore to ionize a noble gas such as argon or krypton.

IONIZING RADIATION
Radiation commonly associated with X-Ray or other high energy electro-magnetic radiation which will cause DNA damage with no direct, immediate thermal effect. Contrasts with non-ionizing radiation of lasers.

IRRADIANCE (E)
Radiant flux (radiant power) per unit area incident upon a given surface. Units: Watts per square centimeter. (Sometimes referred to as power density, although not exactly correct).

IRRADIATION
Exposure to radiant energy, such as heat, X-rays, or light.

JOULE (J)
A unit of energy (1 watt-second) used to describe the rate of energy delivery. It is equal to one watt-second or 0.239 calorie.

JOULE/cm2
A unit of radiant exposure used in measuring the amount of energy incident upon a unit area.

KTP
Potassium Titanyl Phosphate. A crystal used to change the wavelength of a Nd:YAG laser from 1060 nm (infrared) to nm (green).

LAMBERTIAN SURFACE
An ideal diffuse surface whose emitted or reflected radiance (brightness) is dependent on the viewing angle.

LASER
An acronym for light amplification by stimulated emission of radiation. A laser is a cavity, with mirrors at the ends, filled with material such as crystal, glass, liquid, gas or dye. A device which produces an intense beam of light with the unique properties of coherency, collimation and monochromaticity.

LASER ACCESSORIES
The hardware and options available for lasers, such as secondary gases, Brewster windows, Q-switches and electronic shutters.

LASER CONTROLLED AREA
See CONTROLLED AREA.

LASER DEVICE
Either a laser or a laser system.

LASER MEDIUM
(Active Medium) material used to emit the laser light and for which the laser is named.

LASER OSCILLATION
The buildup of the coherent wave between laser cavity end mirrors producing standing waves.

LASER PRODUCT
A legal term in the U.S. See 21 CFR 1040.10, a laser or laser system or any other product that incorporates or is intended to incorporate a laser or a laser system.

LASER ROD
A solid-state, rod-shaped lasing medium in which ion excitation is caused by a source of intense light, such as a flashlamp. Various materials are used for the rod, the earliest of which was synthetic ruby crystal.

LASER SAFETY OFFICER (LSO)
One who has authority to monitor and enforce measure to the control of laser hazards and effect the knowledgeable evaluation and control of laser hazards.

LASER SYSTEM
An assembly of electrical, mechanical and optical components which includes a laser. Under the Federal Standard, a laser in combination with its power supply (energy source).

LEADING EDGE SPIKE
The initial pulse in a series of pulsed laser emissions, often useful in starting a reaction at the target surface. The trailing edge of the laser power is used to maintain the reaction after the initial burst of energy.

LENS
A curved piece of optically transparent material which depending on its shape is used to either converge or diverge light.

LIGHT
The range of electromagnetic radiation frequencies detected by the eye, or the wavelength range from about 400 to 760 nanometers. The term is sometimes used loosely to include radiation beyond visible limits.

LIGHT REGULATION
A form of power regulation in which output power is monitored and maintained at a constant level by controlling discharge current.
LIMITING ANGULAR SUBTENSE The apparent visual angle which divides intrabeam viewing from extended-source viewing.

LIMITING APERTURE
The maximum circular area over which radiance and radiant exposure can be averaged when determining safety hazards.

LIMITING EXPOSURE DURATION
An exposure duration which is specifically limited by the design or intended use(s).

LONGITUDINAL OR AXIAL MODE
Determines the wavelength bandwidth produced by a given laser system controlled by the distance between the two mirrors of the laser cavity. Individual longitudinal mode standing waves within a laser cavity.

LOSSY MEDIUM
A medium which absorbs or scatters radiation passing through it.

MAINTENANCE
Performance of those adjustments or procedures specified in user information provided by the manufacturer with the laser or laser system, which are to be performed by the user to ensure the intended performance of the product. It does not include operation or service as defined in this glossary.

MAXIMUM PERMISSIBLE EXPOSURE (MPE)
The level of laser radiation to which person may be exposed without hazardous effect or adverse biological changes in the eye or skin.

MENISCUS LENS
A lens which has one side convex, the other concave.

METASTABLE STATE
The state of an atom, just below a higher excited state, which an electron occupies momentarily before destabilizing and emitting light. The upper of the two lasing levels.

MICROMETER
A unit of length in the International System of Units (SI) equal to one-millionth of a meter. Often referred to as a "micron".

MICRON
An abbreviated expression for micrometer which is the unit of length equal to 1 millionth of a meter. See MICROMETER.

MICROPROCESSOR
A digital chip (computer) that operates, controls and monitors some lasers.

MODE
A term used to describe how the power of a laser beam is geometrically distributed across the cross-section of the beam. Also used to describe the operating mode of a laser such as continuous or pulsed laser.

MODE LOCKED
A method of producing laser pulses in which short pulses (approximately 10-12 second) are produced and emitted in bursts or a continuous train.

MODULATION
The ability to superimpose an external signal on the output beam of the laser as a control.

MONOCHROMATIC LIGHT
Theoretically, light consisting of just one wavelength. No light is absolutely single frequency since it will have some bandwidth. Lasers provide the narrowest of bandwidths that can be achieved.

MULTIMODE
Laser emission at several closely-spaced frequencies.

NANOMETER (nm)
A unit of length in the International System of Units (SI) equal to one-billionth of a meter. Abbreviated nm - a measure of length. One nm equals 10(-9) meter, and is the usual measure of light wavelengths. Visible light ranges from about 400 nm in the purple to about 760 nm in the deep red.

NANOSECOND
One billionth (10(-9)) of a second. Longer than a picosecond or femto-second, but shorter than a micro-second. Associated with Q-switched lasers.

Nd:GLASS LASER
A solid-state laser of neodymium: glass offering high power in short pulses. A Nd doped glass rod used as a laser medium to produce 1064 nm light.

Nd:YAG LASER
Neodymium:Yttrium Aluminum Garnet. A synthetic crystal used as a laser medium to produce 1064 nm light.

NEAR FIELD IMAGING
A solid-state laser imaging technique offering control of spot size and hole geometry, adjustable working distance, uniform energy distribution, and a wide range of spot sizes.

NEMA
Abbreviation for National Electrical Manufactures' Association, a group which defines and recommends safety standards for electrical equipment.

NEODYMIUM (Nd)
The rare earth element that is the active element in Nd:YAG laser and Nd:Glass lasers.

NOISE
Unwanted minor currents or voltages in an electrical system.

NOMINAL HAZARD ZONE (NHZ)
The nominal hazard zone describes the space within which the level of the direct, reflected or scattered radiation during normal operation exceeds the applicable MPE. Exposure levels beyond the boundary of the NHZ are below the appropriate MPE level.

NOMINAL OCULAR HAZARD DISTANCE (NOHD)
The axial beam distance from the laser where the exposure or irradiance falls below the applicable exposure limit.

OBJECT
The subject matter or figure imaged by, or seen through, an optical system.

OPACITY
The condition of being non-transparent.

OPEN INSTALLATION
Any location where lasers are used which will be open to operating personnel during laser operation and may or may not specifically restrict entry to observers.

OPERATION
The performance of the laser or laser system over the full range of its intended functions (normal operation). It does not include maintenance or services as defined in this glossary.

OPTIC DISC
The portion of the optic nerve within the eye which is formed by the meeting of all the retinal nerve fibers at the level of the retina.

OPTICAL CAVITY
(Resonator) Space between the laser mirrors where lasing action occurs.

OPTICAL DENSITY
A logarithmic expression for the attenuation produced by an attenuating medium, such as an eye protection filter.

OPTICAL FIBER
A filament of quartz or other optical material capable of transmitting light along its length by multiple internal reflection and emitting it at the end.

OPTICAL PUMPING
The excitation of the lasing medium by the application of light rather than electrical discharge.

OPTICAL RADIATION
Ultraviolet, visible and infrared radiation (0.35-1.4 nm) that falls in the region of transmittance of the human eye.

OPTICAL RESONATOR
See Resonator.

OPTICALLY PUMPED LASERS
A type of laser that derives energy from another light source such as a xenon or krypton flashlamp or other laser source.

OUTPUT COUPLER
Partially reflective mirror in laser cavity which allows emission of laser light.

OUTPUT POWER
The energy per second measured in watts emitted from the laser in the form of coherent light.

PHASE
Waves are in phase with each other when all the troughs and peaks coincide and are "locked" together. The result is a reinforced wave in increased amplitude (brightness).

PHOTOCOAGULATION
Use of the laser beam to heat tissue below vaporization temperatures with the principal objective being to stop bleeding and coagulate tissue.

PHOTOMETER
An instrument which measures luminous intensity.

PHOTON
In quantum theory, the elemental unit of light, having both wave and particle behavior. It has motion, but no mass or charge. The photon energy (E) is proportional to the EM wave frequency (v) by the relationship: E=hv; where h is Planck's constant (6.63 x l0(-34) Joule-sec).

PHOTOSENSITIZERS
Chemical substances or medications which increase the sensitivity of the skin or eye to irradiation by optical radiation, usually to UV.

PICOSECOND
A period of time equal to 10-12 seconds.

PIGMENT EPITHELIUM
A layer of cells at the back of the retina containing pigment granules.

PLASMA SHIELD
The ability of plasma to shop transmission of laser light.

POCKEL'S CELL
An electro-optical crystal used as a Q-switch.

POINT SOURCE
Ideally, a source with infinitesimal dimensions. Practically, a source of radiation whose dimensions are small compared with the viewing distance.

POINTING ERRORS
Beam movement and divergence, due to instability within the laser or other optical distortion.

POLARIZATION
Restriction of the vibrations of the electromagnetic field to a single plane, rather that the innumerable planes rotating about the vector axis. Various forms of polarization include random, linear, vertical, horizontal, elliptical and circular.

POPULATION INVERSION
A state in which a substance has been energized, or excited, so that more atoms or molecules are in a higher excited state than in a lower resting state. This is necessary prerequisite for laser action.

POWER
The rate of energy delivery expressed in watts (joules per second). Thus: 1 Watt = 1 Joule x 1 Sec.

POWER METER
An accessory used to measure laser beam power.

PRF
Pulse Repetition Frequency. The number of pulses produced per second by a laser.

PROTECTIVE HOUSING
A protective housing is a device designed to prevent access to radiant power or energy.

PULSE
A discontinuous burst of laser, light or energy, as opposed to a continuous beam. A true pulse achieves higher peak powers than that attainable in a CW output.

PULSE DURATION
The "on" time of a pulsed laser, it may be measured in terms of milliseconds, microsecond, or nanosecond as defined by half-peak-power points on the leading and trailing edges of the pulse.

PULSE MODE
Operation of a laser when the beam is intermittently on in fractions of a second.

PULSED LASER
Laser which delivers energy in the form of a single or train of pulses.

PUMP
To excite the lasing medium. See Optical Pumping or Pumping.

PUMPED MEDIUM
Energized laser medium.

PUMPING
Addition of energy (thermal, electrical, or optical) into the atomic population of the laser medium, necessary to produce a state of population inversion.

Q-SWITCH
A device that has the effect of a shutter to control the laser resonator's ability to oscillate. Control allows one to spoil the resonator's "Q-factor", keeping it low to prevent lasing action. When a high level of energy is stored, the laser can emit a very high-peak-power pulse.

Q-SWITCHED LASER
A laser which stores energy in the laser media to produce extremely short, extremely high intensity bursts of energy.

RADIAN
A unit of angular measure equal to the angle subtended at the center of a circle by a chord whose length is equal to the radius of the circle.

RADIANCE
Brightness; the radiant power per unit solid angle and per unit area of a radiating surface.

RADIANT ENERGY (Q)
Energy in the form of electromagnetic waves usually expressed in units of Joules (watt-seconds).

RADIANT EXPOSURE (H)
The total energy per unit area incident upon a given surface. It is used to express exposure to pulsed laser radiation in units of J/cm(2).

RADIANT FLUX RADIANT POWER
The time rate of flow of radiant energy. Units-watts. (One [1] watt = 1 Joule-per-second). The rate of emission of transmission of radiant energy.

RADIANT INTENSITY
The radiant power expressed per unit solid angle about the direction of the light.

RADIANT POWER
See Radiant flux.

RADIATION
In the context of optics, electromagnetic energy is released; the process of releasing electromagnetic energy.

RADIOMETRY
A branch of science which deals with the measurement of radiation.

RAYLEIGH SCATTERING
Scattering of radiation in the course of its passage through a medium containing particles, the sizes of which are small compared with the wavelength of the radiation.

REFLECTANCE OR REFLECTIVITY
The ratio of the reflected radiant power to the incident radiant power.

REFLECTION
The return of radiant energy (incident light) by a surface, with no change in wavelength.

REFRACTION
The change of direction of propagation of any wave, such as an electromagnetic wave, when it passes from one medium to another in which the wave velocity is different. The bending of incident rays as they pass from one medium to another (eg.: air to glass).

REPETITIVELY PULSED LASER
A laser with multiple pulses of radiant energy occurring in sequence with a PRF greater than or equal to 1 Hz.

RESONATOR
The mirrors (or reflectors) making up the laser cavity including the laser rod or tube. The mirrors reflect light back and forth to build up amplification.

ROTATING LENS
A beam delivery lens designed to move in a circle and thus rotate the laser beam around a circle.

RUBY
The first laser type; a crystal of sapphire (aluminum oxide) containing trace amounts of chromium oxide.

SCANNING LASER
A laser having a time-varying direction, origin or pattern of propagation with respect to a stationary frame of reference.

SCINTILLATION
This term is used to describe the rapid changes in irradiance levels in a cross section of a laser beam produced by atmospheric turbulence.

SECURED ENCLOSURE
An enclosure. to which casual access is impeded by an appropriate means (e.g., door secured by lock, magnetically or electrically operated, latch, or by screws).

SEMICONDUCTOR LASER
A type of laser which produces its output from semiconductor materials such as GaAs.

SERVICE
Performance of adjustments, repair or procedures on a non routine basis, required to return the equipment to its intended state.

SOLID ANGLE
The ratio of the area on the surface of a sphere to the square of the radius of that sphere. It is expressed in steradians (sr).

SOURCE
The term source means either laser or laser-illuminated reflecting surface, i.e., source of light.

SPECTRAL RESPONSE
The response of a device or material to monochromatic light as a function of wavelength.

SPECULAR REFLECTION
A mirror-like reflection.

SPONTANEOUS EMISSION
Decay of an excited atom to a ground or resting state by the random emission of one photon. The decay is determined by the lifetime of the excited state.

SPOT SIZE
The mathematical measurement of the diameter of the laser beam.

STABILITY
The ability of a laser system to resist changes in its operating characteristics. Temperature, electrical, dimensional and power stability are included.

STERADIAN (sr)
The unit of measure for a solid angle.

STIMULATED EMISSION
When an atom, ion or molecule capable of lasing is excited to a higher energy level by an electric charge or other means, it will spontaneously emit a photon as it decays to the normal ground state. If that photon passes near another atom of the same frequency, the second atom will be stimulated to emit a photon.

SUPERPULSE
Electronic pulsing of the laser driving circuit to produce a pulsed output (250-1000 times per second), with peak powers per pulse higher than the maximum attainable in the continuous wave mode. Average powers of superpulse are always lower than the maximum in continuous wave. Process often used on CO(2) surgical lasers.

TEM
Abbreviation for: Transverse Electro-Magnetic modes. Used to designate the cross-sectional shape of the beam.

TEM(oo)
The lowest order mode possible with a bell-shaped (Gaussian) distribution of light across the laser beam.

THERMAL RELAXATION TIME
The time to dissipate the heat absorbed during a laser pulse.

THRESHOLD
The input level at which lasing begins during excitation of the laser medium.

TRANSMISSION
Passage of electromagnetic radiation through a medium.

TRANSMITTANCE
The ratio of transmitted radiant energy to incident radiant energy, or the fraction of light that passes through a medium.

TRANSVERSE ELECTROMAGNETIC MODE
The radial distribution of intensity across a beam as it exits the optical cavity. See TEM.

TUNABLE LASER
A laser system that can be "tuned" to emit laser light over a continuous range of wavelengths or frequencies.

TUNABLE DYE LASER
A laser whose active medium is a liquid dye, pumped by another laser or flashlamps, to produce various colors of light. The color of light may be tuned by adjusting optical tuning elements and-or changing the dye used.

ULTRAVIOLET (UV) RADIATION
Electromagnetic radiation with wavelengths between soft X-rays and visible violet light, often broken down into UV-A (315-400 nm), UV-B (280-315 nm), and UV-C (100-280 nm).

VAPORIZATION
Conversion of a solid or liquid into a vapor.

VIGNETTING
The loss of light through an optical element when the entire bundle of light rays does not pass through; an image or picture that shades off gradually into the background.

VISIBLE RADIATION (LIGHT)
Electromagnetic radiation which can be detected by the human eye. It is commonly used to describe wavelengths which lie in the range between 400 nm and 700-780 nm.

WATT
A unit of power (equivalent to one Joule per second) used to express laser power.

WATT/cm2
A unit of irradiance used in measuring the amount of power per area of absorbing surface, or per area of CW laser beam.

WAVE
An sinusoidal undulation or vibration; a form of movement by which all radiant electromagnetic energy travels.

WAVELENGTH
The length of the light wave, usually measured from crest to crest, which determines its color. Common units of measurement are the micrometer (micron), the nanometer, and (earlier) the Angstrom unit.

WINDOW
A piece of glass with plane parallel sides which admits light into or through an optical system and excludes dirt and moisture.

YAG
Yttrium Aluminum Garnet; a widely used solid-state crystal which is composed of yttrium and aluminum oxides which is doped with a small amount of the rare-earth neodymium.