kenny1999 Posted August 23, 2022 Posted August 23, 2022 For example, rare though, the laser glass inside a DVD/VCD player which used to read the disc is broken, or the laser glass under the wireless mouse is broken due to heavy drop or accident. First, is it easy to happen? Second, are those chemicals used for laser sources hazardous? I know that laser beam cannot be created without exciting some atoms.
swansont Posted August 24, 2022 Posted August 24, 2022 The mouse is likely using just a plain LED. The CD/DVD uses a laser diode, so similar solid-state technology, but with cleaved surfaces to act as mirrors to make the optical cavity. It’s a solid, so there’s nothing that’s going to leak. The diodes themselves are pretty shock resistant, but there’s wiring that could break, or the laser alignment could shift.
kenny1999 Posted August 25, 2022 Author Posted August 25, 2022 On 8/24/2022 at 7:21 PM, swansont said: The mouse is likely using just a plain LED. The CD/DVD uses a laser diode, so similar solid-state technology, but with cleaved surfaces to act as mirrors to make the optical cavity. It’s a solid, so there’s nothing that’s going to leak. The diodes themselves are pretty shock resistant, but there’s wiring that could break, or the laser alignment could shift. Aren't some wireless mouse operated by laser? I'm hearing "laser mouse" very often.
swansont Posted August 25, 2022 Posted August 25, 2022 54 minutes ago, kenny1999 said: Aren't some wireless mouse operated by laser? I'm hearing "laser mouse" very often. Apparently so; I’d not run across it until now. Same issue as for DVD/CD players, most likely. You might break a wire or mess up the lens positioning.
kenny1999 Posted August 25, 2022 Author Posted August 25, 2022 18 minutes ago, swansont said: Apparently so; I’d not run across it until now. Same issue as for DVD/CD players, most likely. You might break a wire or mess up the lens positioning. break a wire? What is the wire?
swansont Posted August 26, 2022 Posted August 26, 2022 12 hours ago, kenny1999 said: break a wire? What is the wire? This is a picture of a laser diode with the protective housing removed. The picture scale is less than 1 cm across. You can see tiny wires going to the laser and to its substrate - this puts the voltage across it and allows current to flow. These can break. There are also wires leading from the power supply to the laser assembly. These could possibly break, too 1
kenny1999 Posted August 26, 2022 Author Posted August 26, 2022 1 hour ago, swansont said: This is a picture of a laser diode with the protective housing removed. The picture scale is less than 1 cm across. You can see tiny wires going to the laser and to its substrate - this puts the voltage across it and allows current to flow. These can break. There are also wires leading from the power supply to the laser assembly. These could possibly break, too but the atoms used to produce laser shouldn't leak under daily stresses and should be safe most of the time, am I right?
swansont Posted August 26, 2022 Posted August 26, 2022 1 hour ago, kenny1999 said: but the atoms used to produce laser shouldn't leak under daily stresses and should be safe most of the time, am I right? It's a solid state device. There's no liquid or gas to leak. 1
CrystalMagic Posted January 27, 2023 Posted January 27, 2023 (edited) Say lasers with rubies are used in our time? Or are they all in the past? Edited January 27, 2023 by CrystalMagic
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