Nounlinear pro pagation of an ultrashort laser pulse in titanium sapphire
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Abstract
Wave propagation in dispersive nonlinear media has become a topic of intense
research activities, in part stimulated by its potential application to optical fiber
communication systems. Propagation of optical pulses in Titanium Sapphire is mainly
influenced by the group velocity dispersion and the refractive index nonlinearity. Rapid
progress in ultra short time laser technology has made it possible that optical pulses
with durations comparable to the carrier oscillation cycle can be generated. The
propagation of such ultra short and intense pulses is then affected by additional physical
mechanisms, where especially higher order effects become important. Highly nonlinear
operating conditions or the interplay between the different linear and nonlinear effects
can result in dramatic changes of the temporal and spectral properties of the pulse.
The propagation of an ultra short pulse is governed by a generalized nonlinear
Schrödinger equation (NLSE), which can be derived from the underlying Maxwell
equations within the slowly varying envelope approximation. We solve numerically a
generalized Schrodinger equation by using a split step Fourier method. Effects such as
the impacts of group velocity dispersion (GVD), third order dispersion (TOD), self phase
modulation (SPM), wave breaking (WB), self steepening (SS), and intrapulse stimulated
Raman scattering (ISRS) are demonstrated in detail. Examples for the above effects are
demonstrated, as well as their interplay in the context of soliton propagation. The
numerical method therefore presents an advantage tool for describing the ultra short
pulse laser propagation in Titanium sapphir