Home | Contact Us | FAQ | Search & Site Map | Link to Us
Sign In | Join | Other 45 Sites in Network
Home
Discussion Groups
Biology
BiologyBotanyMicrobiologyEntomologyEvolutionPaleontology
Chemistry
General ChemistryAnalytical ChemistryElectrochemistryOrganic Synthesis
Earth Science
GeologyMineralogyOceanographyMeteorologyEarthquakes
Physics
General PhysicsResearchRelativityParticle PhysicsElectromagnetismFusionOpticsAcousticsNew Theories

Natural Science Forum / Physics / Research / March 2008



Tip: Looking for answers? Try searching our database.

Is there such a thing as in-phase and coherent white light?

Thread view: 
Enable EMail Alerts  Start New Thread
Thread rating: 
Green Xenon [Radium] - 06 Mar 2008 01:40 GMT
Hi:

Is it possible to generate coherent white light? This is sorta like
laser light except it gives out all wavelengths of visible light at
equal intensities at the same time. Is this possible?

Thanks,

Radium
Rich L. - 06 Mar 2008 23:25 GMT
On Mar 5, 7:40=A0pm, "Green Xenon [Radium]" <gluceg...@excite.com>
wrote:
> Hi:
>
[quoted text clipped - 5 lines]
>
> Radium

It is possible, in principle, in a sense.  There are high speed pulsed
lasers available now, such as the Ti:sapphire laser.  This laser
generates very short pulses of light, about 10E-15 seconds long or
less, and thus has a spectral width of about 10E15 Hz.  The output
from these lasers is a very brief burst of EM radiation, just a few
cycles long, that repeats at about 80 MHz.  If a similar device could
be built that would emit something closer to a train of delta
functions, then the emitted spectrum could approximate white light.
If such an output was analyzed with a spectrometer, one would find
many many narrow band peaks spaced at 1/(the pulse repetition rate).
The number of these peaks would be inversely proportional to the width
of the individual delta function pulses.

This beam could be considered coherent since the EM waveform repeats
periodically.  If the repetition rate was 300 mHz, then the
fundamental waveform would repeat every meter or so, thus you could
get interference between beams that differed in path length by n
meters, where n is any integer.

I know of no devices that can do quite this at present.

Rich L.
Dirk Bruere at NeoPax - 07 Mar 2008 03:31 GMT
> Hi:
>
> Is it possible to generate coherent white light? This is sorta like
> laser light except it gives out all wavelengths of visible light at
> equal intensities at the same time. Is this possible?

Since the eye only perceives red, green and blue that's all you need.
So, yes - just mix the light from three lasers.

FFF
Dirk

http://www.transcendence.me.uk/ - Transcendence UK
Remote Viewing classes in London
John C. Polasek - 08 Mar 2008 15:27 GMT
>Hi:
>
[quoted text clipped - 5 lines]
>
>Radium
No. Assume the contrary. Then every frequency in each zero bandwidth
bin in the continuum would be "in phase", but only with itself, and
the zero bandwidth would equate to zero energy.
It doesn't seem such light would have any of the qualities expected of
coherent light.
Just an amateur opinion.
John Polasek
 
Sign In
Join
My Latest Posts
My Monitored Threads
My Blog
My Photo Gallery
My Profile
My Homepage

Start New Thread
Enable EMail Alerts
Rate this Thread



©2009 Advenet LLC   Privacy Policy - Terms of Use
This website includes both content owned or controlled by Advenet as well as content owned or controlled by third parties.