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Portland State University

Electrical and Computer Engineering Faculty Publications and Presentations

1998

Lasers

Articles 1 - 2 of 2

Full-Text Articles in Engineering

Photographic Studies Of Laser-Induced Bubble Formation In Absorbing Liquids And On Submerged Targets: Implications For Drug Delivery With Microsecond Laser Pulses, Hanqun Shangguan, Lee W. Casperson, Dennis L. Paisley, Scott A. Prahl Aug 1998

Photographic Studies Of Laser-Induced Bubble Formation In Absorbing Liquids And On Submerged Targets: Implications For Drug Delivery With Microsecond Laser Pulses, Hanqun Shangguan, Lee W. Casperson, Dennis L. Paisley, Scott A. Prahl

Electrical and Computer Engineering Faculty Publications and Presentations

Pulsed laser ablation of blood clots in a fluid-filled blood vessel is accompanied by an explosive evaporation process. The resulting vapor bubble rapidly expands and collapses to disrupt the thrombus (blood clot). The hydrodynamic pressures following the bubble expansion and collapse can also be used as a driving force to deliver clot-dissolving agents into thrombus for enhancement of laser thrombolysis. Thus, the laser-induced bubble formation plays an important role in the thrombus removal process. We investigate the effects of boundary configurations and materials on bubble formation with time-resolved flash photography and high-speed photography. Potential applications in drug delivery using microsecond …


Field Solutions For Bidirectional High-Gain Laser Amplifiers And Oscillators, Lee W. Casperson, Mohammad Azadeh Mar 1998

Field Solutions For Bidirectional High-Gain Laser Amplifiers And Oscillators, Lee W. Casperson, Mohammad Azadeh

Electrical and Computer Engineering Faculty Publications and Presentations

General analytical solutions are obtained for the amplitude, phase, and intensity of the electromagnetic waves in bidirectional homogeneously broadened high-gain laser amplifiers and oscillators. These solutions are important as increasingly high-gain lasers are being employed in practical systems. Expressions are derived relating the output power to the input, including the effects of arbitrary mirror reflectivities and frequency detunings from the line center. For negligible reflectivities, these regenerative amplifier results reduce to earlier expressions for single-pass high-gain amplifiers. Multivalued outputs also occur, and in the limit of low gain per pass the results are consistent with earlier studies of single-frequency laser …