Paper
24 June 1996 Detection of extrasolar far-infrared lasers
Sean W. J. Colgan, Edwin F. Erickson, Michael R. Haas, David J. Hollenbach, Howard A. Smith, Vladimir S. Strelnitski
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
The idea of interstellar communication with the aid of lasers and the possibility of manipulating natural lasers to this end make the search for lasing cosmic sources a part of the SETI program. Yet, apart from the very weak lasing in the 10 micrometers CO2 band in the Martian and Venusian atmospheres, only one case of possible natural lasing, in the 4.7 micrometers hydrogen Pf(beta) line from the Becklin-Neugenbauer source in Orion, has been reported but never confirmed. Given hundreds of maser sources detected during the 30 years after their first discover in 1965, the lack of detected natural lasers became a tantalizing puzzle. We undertook a search for high-gain hydrogen lasers in the far-infrared spectrum of MWC349, a peculiar star known as a unique source of mm/submm hydrogen masers. We used the facility cryogenic grating spectrometer onboard the Kuiper Airborne Observatory. An efficient criterion of lasing is elaborated using a set of nonlasing, spontaneous emission lines as a reference. The shortest wavelength line showing an excess of radiation in our search is H10(alpha) at 52 micrometers . We briefly discuss possible reasons for the lack of detectable lasers in the visual and near- infrared domains.
© (1996) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Sean W. J. Colgan, Edwin F. Erickson, Michael R. Haas, David J. Hollenbach, Howard A. Smith, and Vladimir S. Strelnitski "Detection of extrasolar far-infrared lasers", Proc. SPIE 2704, The Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence (SETI) in the Optical Spectrum II, (24 June 1996); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.243441
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KEYWORDS
Hydrogen

Cryogenics

Laser optics

Observatories

Spectroscopy

Stars

Visualization

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