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Title: Filamentary pulse self-compression: The impact of the cell windows

Journal Article · · Physical Review. A
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  1. Weierstrass-Institut fuer Angewandte Analysis und Stochastik, D-10117 Berlin (Germany) and Max-Born-Institut fuer Nichtlineare Optik und Kurzzeitspektroskopie, D-12489 Berlin (Germany)

Self-compression of multi-millijoule laser pulses during filamentary propagation is usually explained by the interplay of self-focusing and defocusing effects, causing a substantial concentration of energy on the axis of the propagating optical pulse. Recently, it has been argued that cell windows may play a decisive role in the self-compression mechanism. As such windows have to be used for media other than air their presence is often unavoidable, yet they present a sudden nonadiabatic change in dispersion and nonlinearity that should lead to a destruction of the temporal and spatial integrity of the light bullets generated in the self-compression mechanism. We now experimentally prove that there is, in fact, a self-healing mechanism that helps to overcome the potentially destructive consequences of the cell windows. We show in two carefully conducted experiments that the cell window position decisively influences activation or inhibition of the self-healing mechanism. A comparison with a windowless cell shows that the presence of this mechanism is an important prerequisite for the exploitation of self-compression effects in windowed cells filled with inert gases.

OSTI ID:
21544690
Journal Information:
Physical Review. A, Vol. 83, Issue 4; Other Information: DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevA.83.043803; (c) 2011 American Institute of Physics; ISSN 1050-2947
Country of Publication:
United States
Language:
English