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Femtosecond multiple filamentation of an optical vortex in the mid-IR wavelength range in fused silica and fluorides

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The results of experimental and theoretical study of the self-action of femtosecond optical vortices in the region of anomalous group velocity dispersion in fused silica and fluorides are presented. Multiple… Click to show full abstract

The results of experimental and theoretical study of the self-action of femtosecond optical vortices in the region of anomalous group velocity dispersion in fused silica and fluorides are presented. Multiple filamentation of an axially asymmetric annular beam with a phase dislocation of topological charge m = 1 at a wavelength of 1800 nm in a LiF crystal is investigated. It is found that for the experimentally recorded intensity profile of a vortex beam with two maxima on the diameter, the critical self-focusing power is approximately two times larger than the critical power of a unimodal Gaussian beam. In pulses with supercritical power in the vicinity of the intensity maxima, two coupled filaments, separated by a phase dislocation, are formed on the annular profile of the optical vortex, which prevents energy exchange during their formation. The length of vortex-beam plasma channels in a single pulse is found to be about 300 μm at a diameter of about 2 μm, which is close to the characteristics of plasma channels in a Gaussian beam.

Keywords: optical vortex; multiple filamentation; silica fluorides; beam; vortex; fused silica

Journal Title: Quantum Electronics
Year Published: 2022

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