Self-mixing interference in a thin-slice solid-state laser with few feedback photons per observation period
Kenju Otsuka, Seiichi Sudo

TL;DR
This study investigates a unique lasing mode in a thin solid-state laser, revealing how thermal lens effects and spatial hole burning influence mode formation, and demonstrates detection of laser Doppler signals with minimal feedback photons.
Contribution
It presents a theoretical and experimental analysis of a peculiar transverse mode in a thin solid-state laser, highlighting the effects of thermal lensing, spatial hole burning, and reduced spontaneous emission factors.
Findings
Formation of a modified TEM00 mode with outer-ring emission.
Photon lifetime significantly shortened to 6.74 ps.
Successful detection of LDV signals with few feedback photons.
Abstract
Formation of a peculiar lasing pattern leading to a TEM00-like mode accompanied by a nonzero bright outer-ring emission (namely, a modified TEM00 mode) was observed in a 300-\mu m-thick LiNdP4O12 (LNP) laser with reflective flat end mirrors that was pumped with a laser diode whose focused spot size was larger than the lasing beam spot size determined by the thermal lens effect. The photon lifetimes of the laser oscillations were found to be greatly shortened to \tau_{p} = 6.74 ps as compared with those in pure TEM00 mode operation, while the fluorescence lifetime was \tau = 130 \mu s. The formation of the peculiar transverse mode was theoretically treated in terms of the pump-intensity-dependent thermal lens effect, which yields the lasing beam spot sizes in the resultant optical cavity. In addition, transverse spatial hole burning of population inversions due to the preceding…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSolid State Laser Technologies · Semiconductor Lasers and Optical Devices · Quantum optics and atomic interactions
