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  2. Laser beam profiler - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laser_beam_profiler

    A laser beam profiler captures, displays, and records the spatial intensity profile of a laser beam at a particular plane transverse to the beam propagation path. Since there are many types of lasers— ultraviolet , visible , infrared , continuous wave , pulsed, high-power, low-power—there is an assortment of instrumentation for measuring ...

  3. Tophat beam - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tophat_beam

    Tophat beams are often used in industry, for example for laser drilling of holes in printed circuit boards. They are also used in very high power laser systems, which use chains of optical amplifiers to produce an intense beam. Tophat beams are named for their resemblance to the shape of a top hat.

  4. Airy disk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Airy_disk

    Hence, the focal spot of a uniform circular laser beam (a flattop beam) focused by a lens will also be an Airy pattern. In a camera or imaging system an object far away gets imaged onto the film or detector plane by the objective lens, and the far field diffraction pattern is observed at the detector.

  5. Gaussian beam - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gaussian_beam

    The equations below assume a beam with a circular cross-section at all values of z; this can be seen by noting that a single transverse dimension, r, appears.Beams with elliptical cross-sections, or with waists at different positions in z for the two transverse dimensions (astigmatic beams) can also be described as Gaussian beams, but with distinct values of w 0 and of the z = 0 location for ...

  6. Laser beam quality - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laser_Beam_Quality

    By observing and recording the beam pattern, for example, one can infer the spatial mode properties of the beam and whether or not the beam is being clipped by an obstruction; By focusing the laser beam with a lens and measuring the minimum spot size, the number of times diffraction limit or focusing quality can be computed.

  7. I-beam - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/I-beam

    In Canada, steel I-beams are now commonly specified using the depth and weight of the beam in metric terms. For example, a "W250x33" beam is approximately 250 millimetres (9.8 in) in depth (height of the I-beam from the outer face of one flange to the outer face of the other flange) and weighs approximately 33 kg/m (22 lb/ft; 67 lb/yd). [8]

  8. Optical aberration - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Optical_aberration

    Image plane of a flat-top beam under the effect of the first 21 Zernike polynomials. Effect of Zernike aberrations in Log scale. The intensity minima are visible. Circular wavefront profiles associated with aberrations may be mathematically modeled using Zernike polynomials.

  9. M squared - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M_squared

    The diameter of the multimode beam is then M times that of the embedded Gaussian beam everywhere, and the divergence is M times greater, but the wavefront curvature is the same. The multimode beam has M 2 times the beam area but 1/M 2 less beam intensity than the embedded beam. This holds true for any given optical system, and thus the minimum ...