Phys. Rev. A 59, 4784 - 4796 (1999)

Observation of conical emission from a single self-trapped beam

Download: PDF (1429 kB) or Buy this Article (Use Article Pack) Export: BibTeX or EndNote (RIS)

B. D. Paul, M. L. Dowell, A. Gallagher, and J. Cooper
Department of Physics, JILA, National Institute of Standards and Technology and University of Colorado, Boulder, Colorado 80309-0440

Received 17 July 1998

We report observations of conical emission from a pulsed laser beam with incident laser power, detuning, and beam diameter matched to a range of single, steady-state filaments. The beam thus propagates with nearly constant diameter through 5 cm of strontium (Sr) vapor. Emission angles (θ) are imaged as the height on the input slit of a 1.5 m spectrometer; a charge-coupled device camera in the spectrometer exit plane measures energy as a function of θ and frequency. Data are reported versus laser-pulse energy, diameter and detuning, and the collisional dephasing rate. Spectrally broad, red-detuned cones are observed, but only when the laser beam is predominately self-trapped. As previously observed in experiments where the beam breaks up into multiple filaments, forward emission at the blue-detuned Rabi sideband is much weaker than at the red (cone) sideband. The cone angle is largely independent of the phase velocity of the self-trapped laser beam, which varies from the vapor to the vacuum speed. The efficiency of the cone emission shows incomplete saturation, as well as strong dependence on self-trapped filament parameters.


©1999 The American Physical Society

URL: http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevA.59.4784
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevA.59.4784
PACS: 42.65.-k, 42.65.Sf, 42.65.Tg

[ Abstract  |  Previous article  |  Next article  |  Issue 6 ]