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There was a time
when lasers were the stuff of science fiction (the word is actually
an acronym for Light Amplification by Stimulated Emission of Radiation).
Today lasers are ubiquitous - everything from grocery store scanners
to the pointers used by public speakers to portable CD players takes
advantage of laser technology.
Yet there are still lasers
that seem more like sci fi than Walkman. And thanks to a $222,000 grant
from the National Science Foundation, four colleges, including three
area schools, are making plans to share such a laser.
A unique collaboration of
chemists from Calvin College, Hope College, Kalamazoo College and University
of Wisconsin-Eau Claire, partnered with faculty at Purdue University,
have obtained a grant to buy a high-end tunable laser system for use
in chemical research.
Calvin professor
Mark Muyskens (above) says that while this laser system uses the same
basic principles as a $10 laser pointer, its sophistication will allow
professors at all four schools to do research at their home institutions
at a more advanced level.
All of the research projects
planned for the new laser system focus on fundamental aspects of the
chemistry of gases, some with significance in atmospheric chemistry.
Another key feature of all of the research projects, says Muyskens,
is to enhance the involvement of college students as undergraduate researchers,
with the laser system providing an important tool for training students
in advanced scientific techniques.
"The new laser will
provide tunable light over a wide range of wavelengths from visible
to ultraviolet light," he says. "The ultraviolet light allows
us to start chemical reactions, while the visible light allows us to
do ultra sensitive detection of molecules. Producing this tunable laser
light is technically challenging, requiring a series of light conversion
techniques starting with a very high power infrared laser."
Muyskens and his
wife Karen (below) share a single position in the Calvin chemistry department.
Karen Muyskens says she and her husband have two significant goals as
Calvin professors.
"We want to be active
as scientists in studying interesting chemical processes," she
says, "and we want to train college students to be scientists."
The new laser system will
help the Muyskens meet both goals they say.
For the past nine years Mark
and Karen have studied the photochemistry of fluorine-containing molecules,
including the production of hydrogen fluoride. The new laser will help
them continue that research. It also will enhance a new area of research
for the duo, the study of gases, including atmospheric pollutants -
work that began in 2002-2003 during their sabbatical at the University
of California at Riverside.
The laser system will reside
at each participating institution for a period of time ranging from
three to nine months. The Muyskens will be the first users during the
summer of 2005. They will also have the laser system at Calvin College
during the 2006-2007 school year.
The consortium plans to specify,
bid, purchase and test the laser system this school year.
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