Quarks to Cosmos
In this episode, we pull back the curtain on the most transformative beam of energy humanity has ever harnessed. We travel back to 1917, when Albert Einstein laid the theoretical foundation for this technology by proposing "stimulated emission", the perfectly synchronized release of light energy. We look at how physicists later turned this theory into reality, creating an acronym that stands for Light Amplification by Stimulated Emission of Radiation. We trace the engineering of these intensely precise beams, exploring the differences between gas, solid-state, and semiconductor lasers that power everything from grocery store barcode scanners to the fiber-optic cables carrying the internet across the ocean floor. Finally, we dive into the cutting edge of laser tech, separating science fiction from reality. We look at why building a real-world lightsaber is an engineering nightmare, how the military is using high-energy lasers to fry enemy drones mid-air, and how scientists are aiming lasers at the future to achieve limitless clean fusion energy and launch spacecraft to other star systems.
22 episodes
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