The mode inside a laser cavity may be understood as the interference of two counter-propagating waves, referred to as the forward and backward waves, respectively. We outline a simple experimental procedure, which does not require any additional components, to study the forward and backward propagating waves everywhere inside a laser cavity. We verify the previous theoretical-only prediction that the two fields may differ substantially in their amplitude profile, even for stable resonator systems, a result that has implications for how laser resonators are conceptualized and how the disparate traveling waves interact with nonlinear intra-cavity elements, for example, passive Qswitches and gain media.
Reference:
Naidoo, D, Ait-Ameur, K, Litvin, I, Fromager, M and Forbes, A. 2012. Observing mode propagation inside a laser cavity. New Journal of Physics, Vol. 14, pp 1-10.
Naidoo, D., Ait-Ameur, K., Litvin, I., Fromager, M., & Forbes, A. (2012). Observing mode propagation inside a laser cavity. http://hdl.handle.net/10204/6341
Naidoo, Darryl, K Ait-Ameur, I Litvin, M Fromager, and A Forbes "Observing mode propagation inside a laser cavity." (2012) http://hdl.handle.net/10204/6341
Naidoo D, Ait-Ameur K, Litvin I, Fromager M, Forbes A. Observing mode propagation inside a laser cavity. 2012; http://hdl.handle.net/10204/6341.
Copyright: 2012 IOP Publishing Ltd and Deutsche Physikalische Gesellschaft. This an ABSTRACT ONLY. The definitive version of the work is published in the New Journal of Physics, Vol. 14, pp 1-10