Paper
24 April 2008 Turbulent thermal blooming
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Abstract
Most system analyses of CW high-power lasers propagating in the atmosphere assume a simple additive linear relation of the impact of thermal blooming and optical turbulence in the atmosphere to the propagated laser beam spreading. In other words, both effects are treated as if they would follow Gaussian statistics in an RMS sense. While the statistics of optical propagation in a turbulent atmosphere can be modeled as Gaussian to first order, thermal blooming is a deterministic nonlinear optical phenomenon. To the best of our knowledge, there is no reason for adding linearly the beam spreading due to these two optical effects. In fact, assuming no interplay in the presence of a strong nonlinear optical interaction is counter-intuitive. As a result, we have performed extensive numerical Monte-Carlo optical wave-propagation simulations, >50,000 realizations, in the presence of thermal-blooming and atmospheric turbulence to varying degrees. During the propagation, the amplitude and the phase of a high power laser field are coupled by the interplay of diffraction, refractive turbulence and thermal blooming. In some cases, we have observed in our numerical experiments a strong coupling between turbulence and nonlinear thermal blooming.
© (2008) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
K. Petrowski, Diane Limsui, C. Menyuk, R. Joseph, M. Thomas, and W. Torruellas "Turbulent thermal blooming", Proc. SPIE 6951, Atmospheric Propagation V, 695104 (24 April 2008); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.777577
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Cited by 2 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Atmospheric propagation

Thermal blooming

Atmospheric optics

Turbulence

Distortion

Laser beam propagation

Atmospheric modeling

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