Oh, well... yes. I know. It just dim a little bit, but not completely disappears. Many reasons, from not so coherent laser - to not so perfect glass piece. It will be better to use thin glass instead thick one.
Very clever observation - I am impressed! Good work!
Are common "red" diode pointers more coherent than common DPSS "green" lasers? I'm just curious. Some of my red lasers seem to have more speckle than my green ones.
@magx1 This is hard to tell. "More speckles" may be due to very narrow beam hitting the target, or properly collimated or focused to the target - so that reflectance and it's interference nature is more pronounced.
Remember: green DPSS is actually IR laser at 1064 nm, just frequency doubled. There is problem with "dual wavelength" mirrors - green and IR. If one cavity mode is well matched (say IR), then other one is probably not. Not to mention thermal expansion, thermal lensing effect etc.
@MilanKarakas Oops. Not exactly 1064 nm for YVO4 crystal. But close to that.
And thank you, but this is not my observation - it is well known phenomena. I just wanted to point out to that possibility.
And, during rush to make this short film, I forgot to mention that it is not actually exactly from 0 - 16%. FIrst reflectance is say 4%, then second reflectance is 4% of 96%, and that is 3.84%, not 4% as I said above.
This is very important - 4-3.84=0.16%. And there are another reflections....
i can't see it disappears! tnx anyway
live4Cha 2 months ago
@live4Cha
Oh, well... yes. I know. It just dim a little bit, but not completely disappears. Many reasons, from not so coherent laser - to not so perfect glass piece. It will be better to use thin glass instead thick one.
MilanKarakas 2 months ago
Very clever observation - I am impressed! Good work!
Are common "red" diode pointers more coherent than common DPSS "green" lasers? I'm just curious. Some of my red lasers seem to have more speckle than my green ones.
magx1 6 months ago
@magx1 This is hard to tell. "More speckles" may be due to very narrow beam hitting the target, or properly collimated or focused to the target - so that reflectance and it's interference nature is more pronounced.
Remember: green DPSS is actually IR laser at 1064 nm, just frequency doubled. There is problem with "dual wavelength" mirrors - green and IR. If one cavity mode is well matched (say IR), then other one is probably not. Not to mention thermal expansion, thermal lensing effect etc.
MilanKarakas 6 months ago
@MilanKarakas Oops. Not exactly 1064 nm for YVO4 crystal. But close to that.
And thank you, but this is not my observation - it is well known phenomena. I just wanted to point out to that possibility.
And, during rush to make this short film, I forgot to mention that it is not actually exactly from 0 - 16%. FIrst reflectance is say 4%, then second reflectance is 4% of 96%, and that is 3.84%, not 4% as I said above.
This is very important - 4-3.84=0.16%. And there are another reflections....
MilanKarakas 6 months ago