Astrophysical Lasers
Vladilen Letokhov and Sveneric Johansson
Abstract
Progress in modern radio astronomy led to the discovery of space masers in the microwave range, and it became a powerful tool for studies of interstellar star-forming molecular clouds. Progress in observational astronomy, particularly with ground-based huge telescopes and the space-based Hubble Space Telescope, has led to recent discoveries of space lasers in the optical range. These operate in gas condensations in the vicinity of the mysterious star Eta Carinae (one of the most luminous and massive stars of our Galaxy). Both maser and laser effects, first demonstrated under laboratory conditi ... More
Progress in modern radio astronomy led to the discovery of space masers in the microwave range, and it became a powerful tool for studies of interstellar star-forming molecular clouds. Progress in observational astronomy, particularly with ground-based huge telescopes and the space-based Hubble Space Telescope, has led to recent discoveries of space lasers in the optical range. These operate in gas condensations in the vicinity of the mysterious star Eta Carinae (one of the most luminous and massive stars of our Galaxy). Both maser and laser effects, first demonstrated under laboratory conditions, have now been discovered to occur under natural conditions in space too. This book describes consistently the elements of laser science, astrophysical plasmas, modern astronomical observation techniques, and the fundamentals and properties of astrophysical lasers.
Keywords:
radio astronomy,
microwave,
molecular clouds,
observational astronomy,
Hubble Space Telescope,
Eta Carinae,
laser science,
astrophysical plasmas
Bibliographic Information
| Print publication date: 2008 |
Print ISBN-13: 9780199548279 |
| Published to Oxford Scholarship Online: May 2009 |
DOI:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199548279.001.0001 |
Authors
Affiliations are at time of print publication.
Vladilen Letokhov, Author
Institute of Spectroscopy, Troitsk, Russia
Sveneric Johansson, Author
Atomic Astrophysics Division, Institute of Astronomy, Lund University, Sweden
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