This is very intriguing and it looks to be important commercially. I suspect that the future of modern physics will tend more and more into optical methods. This is showing us how to manipulate materials and light to provide complex solutions.
All good work and we will follow developments.
Optics is both simple and sophisticated enough to challenge everyone.
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Russain physicists from study laser beam compressed into thin filament
The
supercontinuum generation is in an optical fiber. The input is composed
of infrared pulses, and the output includes practically the whole
visible spectrum. Image courtesy of Dimitris Papadopoulos.
by Staff Writers
Moscow, Russia (SPX) Jun 05, 2015
http://www.spacedaily.com/reports/Russain_physicists_from_study_laser_beam_compressed_into_thin_filament_999.html
A group of scientists from the Lebedev Physical Institute of the Russian
Academy of Sciences, Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology and
Moscow State University recently presented their research into the
process of laser pulse filamentation - the effect produced when a laser
beam propagating in air focuses into a filament. The researchers
discovered how this process influences the preliminary transition of a
beam passing through quartz glass, which has applications in the field
of nonlinear optics.
Light propagates in straight lines, and beams of light are only
reflected or refracted to the side when the properties of the medium it
is passing through change. This is the basis of linear optics: it is
called 'linear' because the division of electric charges that occurs
when light passes through a medium is linearly dependent on the
intensity of the fields in the light wave itself. In other words, the
stronger the electric field, the more the different charges are
dispersed within the material - the material becomes polarized.
The polarization of a material should not be confused with the
polarization of light. This polarization is characterised by the degree
to which the positive and negative charges are dispersed in a substance,
and in this way the presence of specific directions within the
electromagnetic wave within which the electric fields vibrate is called
polarization.
Ordinary light is a mixture of waves having different polarizations, and
lasers, as a rule, produce polarized beams, a set of similarly
orientated waves.
However if the light is very strong, then its influence on materials
cannot be described by these simple rules. At the microscopic level, the
picture of the displacement of electric charges in substances under the
influence of an electromagnetic field changes, but at normal scales
light begins to behave in strange ways. The beams, instead of dispersing
in different directions and dissipating, begin to gather into narrow
strands, or as optics researchers call them, filaments. Light can even
make substances change color - an effect known as supercontinuum (that
is, white light in which lights of different colors are mixed) and
harmonic generation.
Only lasers provide a sufficiently strong light (more accurately, beam
intensity) capable of producing nonlinear effects. When these light
sources were first made, nonlinear optics began to develop quickly, but
even today not all nonlinear optical effects are fully researched. In
particular, filaments have been actively researched since the sixties,
but there is still no complete theory that describes their
characteristics in different conditions.
Atmospheric composition, beam intensity, wave length polarization and a
multitude of other factors affect the formation of filaments. Real
optical assemblies usually consist of a variety of different elements,
and each of them, whether the mirror, lens, or even simple glass plates,
can change the picture quite radically. In the new research, which is
discussed in detail below, the scientists investigate the process of
laser pulse filamentation.
The experiment and results
Nonlinear optical effects can be studied only with very large
intensities. So large, in fact, that they can only be produced with
powers in the gigawatt range - consequently, for experimental research,
it is necessary to achieve a very short pulse. So, if a pulse with a
combined energy of 2.2 millijoules is compressed to a hundred
femtoseconds (10 to 13 seconds), then the power of the beam will be more
than 20 gigawatts.
And if this beam is also focused into a speck with a three millimeter
diameter, then we get an intensity of light an order higher than the
intensity of light close to the sun's surface, which has a radiation
power of about 20 gigawatts a square meter.
How does brightness differ from intensity and luminosity? Brightness
shows how much light is emitted by an object in a given direction.
Luminosity describes how much light is emitted by a source in all
directions. Intensity is how much energy is carried by an
electromagnetic wave in a given unit of time and in a given unit of
area.
The dimensions outlined in the previous paragraph are those used in the
experiment conducted by the researchers from MSU, MIPT, and the Lebedev
Institute. The experimental group, under the leadership of Andrei Ionin,
head of the Laboratory of Gas Lasers, consisting of staff members Darya
Mokrousova, Leonid Seleznyov, Elena Sunchugasheva and Anna Shustikova,
used a Ti:sapphire pulse laser.
The beam is focused using a spherical mirror and passes through a quartz
glass plate and is directed towards two ring electrodes that are held
at 300 volts. When the laser pulse has ionized the air, a current begins
to pass between the electrodes and, as a result, the physicists are
able to assess the appearance of the plasma clusters formed under the
influence of the light that has formed into filaments.
After analyzing the shape and size of the filaments thus formed, the
researchers changed the quartz plate through which the light passed
before it was focused. It appeared that changing the thickness of the
transparent plate affected not only the length of the plasma channel,
but also the distance at which it arose.
By focusing the laser beam using a lens with a focal point of 230 cm in
the absence of a quartz plate, the laser beam formed at a distance of
150 cm, introducing a 4.5 mm plate caused the formation of plasma
filaments to be brought nearer by 40 cm, and by increasing the thickness
of the plate to 10.5 mm, the distance to the start of the plasma was
reduced by almost 85 cm. In addition, the length of the plasma produced
increases with an increase in the thickness of the quartz plate.
Quantitative modeling of the experiment conducted by the MSU research
group consisting of Valery Kandidov, Svyatoslav Shlenov and Alexander
Dergachev revealed a strong correlation with the experiment itself. A
detailed report on the behavior of the laser filaments was published by
the physicists in the journal Laser Physics Letters.
Why is this needed?
Earlier, the Laboratory of Gas Lasers at Lebedev demonstrated that such
lasers can be used for many different tasks, from the etching of
diamonds to medical operations, as beams concentrated into fine
filaments enable more precise interactions with different materials.
However, in practice, real optical systems rarely consist of just one
laser. They can also include mirrors, lenses and transparent windows
that are used to enclose the technological space used for processing
materials.
The new research has shown the even transparent plates made of quartz
glass can significantly alter the laser filaments, an effect that leads
to an improvement in the precision of material processing or a
correction to the distance at which the power of the laser beam is
delivered.
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