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Wikipedia:Featured picture candidates/Plume

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A plume ejected from SrRuO3 during Pulsed Laser Deposition
A plume ejected from SrRuO3 during Pulsed Laser Deposition (higher res)

The picture illustrates the physical process of laser-surface interaction. When a high power laser pulse strikes a surface, a plasma plume is ejected from the small spot where the focused beam hits the surface. The plume then expands into the vacuum surrounding the surface, inside a vacuum chamber. The process occurs during Pulsed Laser Deposition; a process used to deposit thin films for microelectronics, MEMS, dielectrics, etc. I took this picture and added it to the Pulsed Laser Deposition article recently.

From a technical standpoint, the shot is OK, not great. But a single pulse only lasts ~30 nanoseconds! So this picture is an average of many pulses striking a surface. It's a science-related picture and I think there should be more of that stuff here, especially if it is aesthetically pleasing.

Not promoted Mikeo 17:27, 11 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]