44 research outputs found
Nonlinear combining of laser beams
We propose to combine multiple laser beams into a single diffraction-limited
beam by the beam self-focusing (collapse) in the Kerr medium. The beams with
the total power above critical are first combined in the near field and then
propagated in the optical fiber/waveguide with the Kerr nonlinearity. Random
fluctuations during propagation eventually trigger strong self-focusing event
and produce diffraction-limited beam carrying the critical power.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
Non-Gaussian Statistics of Multiple Filamentation
We consider the statistics of light amplitude fluctuations for the
propagation of a laser beam subjected to multiple filamentation in an amplified
Kerr media, with both linear and nonlinear dissipation. Dissipation arrests the
catastrophic collapse of filaments, causing their disintegration into almost
linear waves. These waves form a nearly-Gaussian random field which seeds new
filaments. For small amplitudes the probability density function (PDF) of light
amplitude is close to Gaussian, while for large amplitudes the PDF has a long
power-like tail which corresponds to strong non-Gaussian fluctuations, i.e.
intermittency of strong optical turbulence. This tail is determined by the
universal form of near singular filaments and the PDF for the maximum
amplitudes of the filaments