Yes, it Is

Long day of driving yesterday, and at some point I’ll start wading through all of my RSS feeds, etc., but for now, here’s a sign from just outside of Ridgeway, PA (“Avoid carpal-tunnel: just keep your headlights turned on!”)

bender

One Other Thing

… about the new camera. It’s not just a (high speed) video camera, it also takes stills, though it doesn’t do all the things that an SLR does.

damselfly

This is a damselfly, which are related to dragonflies. The main difference to my eye (not being a biologist) is wings open vs. closed when resting. There are other differences, too, though rectal tracheal gills was a phrase I didn’t need to see. Oops. Spoiler alert.

A great, or at least pretty good, blue heron.

blueheron

A monarch butterfly and caterpillar

before-and-after

Some bug on Queen Anne’s Lace
bug-1224

Taking Umbrage

And Penumbrage, I guess. The Big Picture: The longest solar eclipse of the century

Earlier today, the moon passed directly in front of the sun, causing a total solar eclipse that crossed nearly half the Earth – through India, Nepal, Bangladesh, Bhutan, Myanmar and China. Today’s was the longest total solar eclipse of the 21st century, lasting as much as 6 minutes and 39 seconds in a few areas. Despite cloudy skies in many of the populated areas in the path, millions of people gathered outside to gaze up and view this rare event. Collected here are a few images of the eclipse, and those people who came out to watch. (33 photos total)

Here’s what it looked like from the ISS

Vintage Lab Pics: The Laser System

I already showed the vacuum system from my grad school days. This is the laser system that drove it. Slowing and trapping a thermal beam of atoms and then creating a new cold beam requires several lasers at different frequencies.

This first picture is a diode laser system, obviously home-built; this pre-dates any sort of commercially available system by several years, and perhaps a decade. On the far left are the electrical connections and the on/off switch. Power is needed for the laser, a piezoelectric transducer stack and the thermoelectic cooler, and a signal from a thermistor is fed back for coarse temperature tuning/stabilization of the wavelength. The diode is mounted in the thin rectangular block and has a collimating lens mounted in the thicker one; as I recall the lens position was adjusted with an external jig and then glued down.

osu-diode-laser

Light leaves the diode and hits the grating, reflecting off to the bottom, but the grating is blazed — the lines are angled, and in this position one of the diffraction orders is reflected back into the laser, which forces the laser to operate at that frequency. Thus, by changing the angle slightly, the wavelength can be tuned over some small range, perhaps a few nanometers. The grating is mounted on a small kinematic mount, and this obscures a gap between two parts of the mount. At the lower right you can see the gap where the piezo stack is, and at the upper left, near the screw, is the pivot point.

The entire block is mounted on a thermoelectric cooler to stabilize the temperature. Laser diodes are coarsely temperature-tunable, so the temperature is chosen to get you close to the desired wavelength (780.24 nm for Rb-85). When operating, this would be covered with a plexiglass housing to act as a thermal barrier and a baffle for air currents, and on later designs contained a tray for a desiccant to help prevent condensation on the cold laser.

Here is the table, with a couple of lasers in the foreground. Light goes out of the side of the boxes and hits the turning mirrors; some of the light is picked off and sent into the spectroscopy cells visible just past the lasers (the one on the left is closer) This ensured the lasers were on resonance.

osu-diode-laser-setup

This is the whole laser table, showing the vacuum system on the right. Much of the equipment is on shelves above the optical table, and this design ensured the attraction of shorter personnel to the lab, as might be predicted by Murphy’s law.

osu-laser-table

The blue boxes on the center-line of the table are fast photodiodes; we used a beat between lasers to generate a locking signal for those not locked to the spectroscopy signals, and could tune the other lasers several MHz away using this technique. This allowed us to tune the trapping laser beams such that the trap was not stationary in the lab frame. The atoms would feel a force to eject them from the atomic funnel, and the lasers would become equal due to the Doppler shift, once they atoms were moving at the right speed.