Photo Gallery

Helium-Neon Laser
Unfortunately, this is a low-resolution picture of a helium-neon gas laser. The red laser beam can be seen on the left emanating from the partial mirror at the end of the resonating cavity.  Early He-Ne lasers had external mirrors and the discharge tube used ‘Brewster- angled’ windows at the end of the cavity. This prevents reflections from the gas tube ends instead of the mirrors.  Later, the mirrors were glued to the cavity tube ends and sealing the tube. Although this allowed the mirror alignment to be factory set, there was an issue with helium escaping through the glue seals. This resulted in a relatively short life of the laser tube. Interestingly, a tube suffering from this would light as normal but not lase.   This tube was of a later design where the seals were hardened and useful life extended considerably. Producing a red laser with a He-Ne discharge is now confined to history due to its low efficiency and the advent of semiconductor lasers.
Keywords: Miscellaneous

Helium-Neon Laser

Unfortunately, this is a low-resolution picture of a helium-neon gas laser. The red laser beam can be seen on the left emanating from the partial mirror at the end of the resonating cavity. Early He-Ne lasers had external mirrors and the discharge tube used ‘Brewster- angled’ windows at the end of the cavity. This prevents reflections from the gas tube ends instead of the mirrors. Later, the mirrors were glued to the cavity tube ends and sealing the tube. Although this allowed the mirror alignment to be factory set, there was an issue with helium escaping through the glue seals. This resulted in a relatively short life of the laser tube. Interestingly, a tube suffering from this would light as normal but not lase. This tube was of a later design where the seals were hardened and useful life extended considerably. Producing a red laser with a He-Ne discharge is now confined to history due to its low efficiency and the advent of semiconductor lasers.

IMG_9952.JPG IMG_9239.jpg laser_light.jpg 20231230_123547.jpg Sulfur.jpg
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Filename:laser_light.jpg
Album name:Tuopeek / Miscellaneous
Keywords:Miscellaneous
Filesize:54 KiB
Date added:Sep 20, 2025
Dimensions:1309 x 744 pixels
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DateTime Original:2010:03:12 20:06:33
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URL:https://trad-lighting.net/gallery/displayimage.php?pid=978
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Comment 1 to 5 of 5
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Max   [Sep 21, 2025 at 01:41 PM]
Nice shot, Mark! That brings back some good memories, I have a few of those from 0.5 to 35 mW, still operational 40+ years on! How did you make the laser beam visible? with steam? smoke? If I am not mistaken, HeNe laser tubes are still being used in very specific applications that require the utmost spectral purity and/or a high phase stability (holography, metrology, etc).
Tuopeek   [Sep 21, 2025 at 03:28 PM]
Think I just used an aerosol to show the beam. Good to know they should keep going for 40 odd years. I have a couple of tubes still around. This particular one unfortunately rolled off my bench a few years ago. Good to know they still have a place. It would make sense some specialist uses still remain as they seem to have a much more coherent beam when compared to semiconductors.
Max   [Sep 21, 2025 at 04:22 PM]
The He-Ne lasing medium has a much narrower amplification bandwidth, and the use of a suitable resonating cavity design can produce a single-mode oscillation with an ultra-high phase stability, resulting in an extremely long coherence length. So, yes, those tubes (in a special configuration though) are still useful as it is way more difficult to achieve such spectral purity and phase stability with laser diodes.
AgentHalogen_87   [Sep 26, 2025 at 11:14 PM]
It's really cool to see the inner workings of a laser module! Cool
Tuopeek   [Sep 27, 2025 at 11:13 AM]
Yeah, they look great with the Ne-He discharge even with out the laser beam.

Comment 1 to 5 of 5
Page: 1