Self-focused light propagation in a fully saturable medium: Theory
- 1 October 1995
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Physical Society (APS) in Physical Review A
- Vol. 52 (4) , 3244-3253
- https://doi.org/10.1103/physreva.52.3244
Abstract
A comprehensive model of intense laser light propagation in a fully saturable medium is presented. This model employs the Maxwell-Bloch equations for a two-level atomic system. Light propagating through a medium creates intensity-dependent index of refraction gradients that reduce to a Kerr nonlinearity only for a weak field. When the laser detuning is positive, self-induced index gradients cause the beam to self-focus. Stationary filaments occur when self-focusing exactly balances diffraction. There exists a unique set of two-dimensional fundamental (and higher mode) solutions for which the filament transverse profile (not Gaussian in general) depends on the following quantities: density of saturable absorbers, laser detuning from resonance, laser power, and natural linewidth. (In contrast the Kerr solution does not have a unique filament diameter.) Emphasis will be placed on propagation of Gaussian incident beams; deviations from the stationary solution in either shape or power generally give rise to oscillating spatial patterns, including donutlike profiles, or beam breakup.Keywords
This publication has 33 references indexed in Scilit:
- Failures of the four-wave mixing model for cone emissionOptics Communications, 1994
- Devices written by colliding spatial solitons: a coupled mode theory approachOptics Communications, 1993
- Conical emission in barium vapourOptics Communications, 1993
- Multiple conical emissions from a strongly driven atomic systemJournal of the Optical Society of America B, 1988
- An improved method for computing a discrete Hankel transformComputer Physics Communications, 1987
- On the optical characteristics of the conical emissionOptics Communications, 1986
- On the origin of the so called conical emission in laser pulse propagation in atomic vaporOptics Communications, 1984
- Anomalous off-axis emissions on the resonance strontium line, illuminated by a quasi-resonant pulsed laser lightOptics Communications, 1980
- Multiple conical emission from near resonant laser propagation in dense sodium vaporOptics Communications, 1980
- Self-Focusing of Light by Potassium VaporPhysical Review Letters, 1970