How does stimulated emmision work?

  • Thread starter Thread starter Superposed_Cat
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Stimulated Work
Superposed_Cat
Messages
388
Reaction score
5
Hi all, I was wondering mathematically how stimulated emission works, could someone please explain it more concisely than wikipaedia? Thanks for any help...:shy:
 
Physics news on Phys.org
Mathematically? Stimulated emission is a physical process where a photon stimulates something which is in a higher energy state to drop to a lower energy state where the energy difference is the same as the energy of the photon. The result is a coherent interference between the incoming photon and the the stimulated photon.

The above description is general in that it applies to masers (microwave - molecular transitions) as well as lasers (atomic transitions).
 
There has to be some mathematical relation/equation/formulism surely?
 
I heard that einstein discovered stimulated emission, he didn't do that heuristically.
 
Einstein used the principle of detailed balance. Essentially, when the atoms are in thermal equilibrium with radiation at a given temperature, they should reach a steady state equilibrium. At this state, the rate of photons emitted by a transition from a higher to lower energy level, m \rightarrow n must be equal to the rate of photons absorbed, exciting the lower level to the higher level n \rightarrow m. So you need to balance the two rates.

What Einstein found was that the only way for this to work is to include not only spontaneous emission, but also stimulated emission, otherwise there is no way for the thermodynamics to be consistent. You ask for mathematical models, but these are quite easy to find online and I didn't feel the need to write them out here. Here are two nice sources, which assume familiarity with statistical mechanics and blackbody radiation:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Einstein_coefficients (see "detailed balancing")

http://farside.ph.utexas.edu/teaching/qmech/Quantum/node119.html
 
  • Like
Likes 1 person
From the BCS theory of superconductivity is well known that the superfluid density smoothly decreases with increasing temperature. Annihilated superfluid carriers become normal and lose their momenta on lattice atoms. So if we induce a persistent supercurrent in a ring below Tc and after that slowly increase the temperature, we must observe a decrease in the actual supercurrent, because the density of electron pairs and total supercurrent momentum decrease. However, this supercurrent...
Hi. I have got question as in title. How can idea of instantaneous dipole moment for atoms like, for example hydrogen be consistent with idea of orbitals? At my level of knowledge London dispersion forces are derived taking into account Bohr model of atom. But we know today that this model is not correct. If it would be correct I understand that at each time electron is at some point at radius at some angle and there is dipole moment at this time from nucleus to electron at orbit. But how...
Back
Top