The impact of nonadiabatic laser-induced molecular alignment on filamentation
is numerically studied. Weak and strong field model of impulsive molecular
alignment are compared in the context of nonlinear pulse propagation. It is
shown that the widely used weak field model describing the refractive index
modification induced by impulsive molecular alignment accurately reproduces the
propagation dynamics providing that only a single pulse is involved during the
experiment. On the contrary, it fails at reproducing the nonlinear propagation
experienced by an intense laser pulse traveling in the wake of a second strong
laser pulse. The discrepancy depends on the relative delay between the two
pulses and is maximal for delays corresponding to half the rotational period of
the molecule