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On Mar 9, 6:33 pm, Chuck wrote:
On Sun, 9 Mar 2008 15:07:26 -0700 (PDT), K7ITM wrote: Note that, as far as I've been able to determine, Michelson did not have a coherent light source to shine into his interferometer, but still he saw interference patterns. Perhaps he had invented lasers It is said he used sodium vapor gas light (~589 nm). Coherent enough. Chuck Just a slight addition here. Before lasers, the way to get a coherent light source was to bottle-up a high-intensity, monochromatic source, such as the aforementioned sodium- vapor light, in a reflective cavity with a very small pinhole in its side. As the photons dribble out through the pinhole, they are forced into a somewhat phase-coherent wave train. This source was used in optical processors for synthetic-aperture imagery back in the 50's.... Jim, K7JEB |
#2
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![]() "Jim, K7JEB" wrote in message ... ....This source was used in optical processors for synthetic-aperture imagery back in the 50's.... That should have read "synthetic-aperture radar imagery"... Just trying to not let my mind outrun my typing speed. K7JEB |
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