There are lasers in which the required conditions for lasing are achieved in exotic ways.
As an example, we shall examine a family of lasers in which the radiation
is emitted from a molecule which only exists for a very short time.
This molecule is composed of an atom of noble
gas: Argon, Krypton or Xenon, and an atom of halogen:
Fluorine, Chlorine, Bromine or Iodine.
An Excimer is a molecule which has a bound state (existence) only in an excited state.
In the ground state this molecule does not exist, and the atoms are separated.
The excited state exists for a very short time, less than 10 nanoseconds.
The name Excimer comes from the combination of the two words: exited dimer, which means that the molecule is composed of two atoms, and exists only in an excited state.
(Some scientists consider this molecule to be a complex, and they call
the laser "Exiplex").