AT&T Archives: Principles of the Optical Maser
See more from the AT&T Archives at http://techchannel.att.com/archives This 1963 film shows how basic physical concepts are applied to make an optical maser oscillate. The optical maser is examined as a generator of electromagnetic energy in the optical range of frequencies, having many similar qualities to standard radio and microwave oscillators. The principal types of gas and solid-state optical masers are shown in the laboratory. Dr. C. G. B. Garrett of Bell Laboratories (and his prominent British accent) presents the material, which also includes lab demonstrations and animation. The Optical maser is a phrase that means the same as Laser - or Light Amplification by Stimulated Emission of Radiation. A Laser is basically a Maser that works with photons in the light spectrum. There are optical and infrared masers, as profiled in the 1958 pioneering paper that introduced the concept to the world, written by Bell Labs scientists Charles H. Townes and Arthur L. Schawlow. Dr. Garrett worked with Dr.s Townes and Schawlow, and is shown here with the latter. Original audience: college students Produced at Bell Laboratories Footage courtesy of AT&T Archives and History Center, Warren, NJ

AT&T Archives: Principles of the Optical Maser (Bonus Edition)

The Professor Who Taught People How To Think (1962)

Optical Interferometry Part 1: Introduction & ZYGO GPI layout

AT&T Archives: Similiarities of Wave Behavior (Bonus Edition)

The chemical history of a candle - with David Ricketts

3 reasons pilot wave theory is the best interpretation of quantum mechanics (and 3 reasons it's not)

AT&T Archives: Seeing the Digital Future (1961)

Light & Coherence part 1: Temporal Coherence

AT&T Archives: Dr. Walter Brattain on Semiconductor Physics (Bonus Edition)

AT&T Archives: Matter Waves, Holden and Germer on Wave Nature and the Davisson-Germer Experiment

The World's Most Important Machine

AT&T Archives: The Dew Line (Bonus Edition)

Pushing Simulations to the LIMIT to Find Order in Chaos

Electromagnetic Waves - with Sir Lawrence Bragg

The First Transistors

How are holograms possible?

AlphaFold - The Most Useful Thing AI Has Ever Done

AT&T Archives: Submarine Cable Systems Development

Professor Eric Laithwaite: The Circle of Magnetism - 1968

