Fluctuations and Correlations of Emission from Random Lasers
Jason W. Merrill, Hui Cao, Eric R. Dufresne

TL;DR
This paper investigates the statistical properties of emission from random lasers, revealing how intensity fluctuations and correlations depend on scatterer motion and lasing modes, supported by experimental data and a mean-field model.
Contribution
It provides a comparative analysis of emission statistics for stationary versus freely-diffusing scatterers and introduces a mean-field model explaining observed correlations.
Findings
Lévy-like statistics observed when pooling data across scatterer configurations.
Exponential intensity distributions found for fixed scatterers with varying mean intensities.
Strong correlations of lasing peak intensities across wavelengths.
Abstract
When light travels through strongly scattering media with optical gain, the synergy between diffusive transport and stimulated emission can lead to lasing action. Below the threshold pump power, the emission spectrum is smooth and consistent from shot-to-shot. Above the lasing threshold, the spectrum of emitted light becomes spiky and shows strong fluctuations from shot-to-shot. Recent experiments have reported that emitted intensity resembles a power-law distribution (\emph{i.e.} L\'evy statistics). Recent theories have described the emergence of L\'evy statistics as an intrinsic property of lasing in random media. To separate intrinsic intensity fluctuations from the motion of scatterers, we compare the statistics of samples with stationary or freely-diffusing scatterers. Consistent with previous reports, we observe L\'evy-like statistics when intensity data are pooled across an…
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