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by arctux
2823 days ago
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Our strongest trap is powered by 1.5 W 1064 nm laser beam. (For comparison, laser pointers are usually under 0.005 W.) Unlike most other light sources, laser power measures the output power rather than electrical input power. The beam will instantly ignite paper, and will cause damage to the most common type of laboratory laser beam blocks, which are made out of stainless steel. We don't take the air out the system. Air is basically completely transparent in the visible and infrared. We sometimes flood a portion of the instrument with helium, since its index of refraction is ten-fold closer to 1 than air's. This causes the beam to fluctuate less due to air movement. |
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Curious, it appears that you guys use a highly focused beam on small particles, like 1 W focused into a diffraction limited spot, right?
How come the bio-molecules that you're manipulating with this light don't just "burn up"? Is it because they're mostly transparent at that wavelength? Or you're only exciting a marker molecule that is stuck to them?