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[[File:Gouy phase.gif|200px|thumb|right|Focussed Gaussian beam (top) compared with a plane wave (bottom). The two are in phase on the left side, but π out of phase on the right.]]
===Gouy phase===
===Gouy phase===
The ''[[Louis Georges Gouy|Gouy]] phase'' of the beam at ''z'' is given by<ref name="svelto153" />
The ''[[Louis Georges Gouy|Gouy]] phase'' of the beam at ''z'' is given by<ref name="svelto153" />

Revision as of 16:51, 6 December 2019

Intensity of a simulated Gaussian beam around focus at an instant of time, showing two intensity peaks for each wavefront.
Top: transverse intensity profile of a Gaussian beam that is propagating out of the page. Blue curve: electric (or magnetic) field amplitude vs. radial position from the beam axis. The black curve is the corresponding intensity.
A 5 mW green laser pointer beam profile, showing the TEM00 profile.

In optics, a Gaussian beam is a beam of monochromatic electromagnetic radiation whose transverse magnetic and electric field amplitude profiles are given by the Gaussian function; this also implies a Gaussian intensity (irradiance) profile. This fundamental (or TEM00) transverse gaussian mode describes the intended output of most (but not all) lasers, as such a beam can be focused into the most concentrated spot. When such a beam is refocused by a lens, the transverse phase dependence is altered; this results in a different Gaussian beam. The electric and magnetic field amplitude profiles along any such circular Gaussian beam (for a given wavelength and polarization) are determined by a single parameter: the so-called waist w0. At any position z relative to the waist (focus) along a beam having a specified w0, the field amplitudes and phases are thereby determined[1] as detailed below.

The equations below assume a beam with a circular cross-section at all values of z; this can be seen by noting that a single transverse dimension, r, appears. Beams with elliptical cross-sections, or with waists at different positions in z for the two transverse dimensions (astigmatic beams) can also be described as Gaussian beams, but with distinct values of w0 and of the z = 0 location for the two transverse dimensions x and y.

Arbitrary solutions of the paraxial Helmholtz equation can be expressed as combinations of Hermite–Gaussian modes (whose amplitude profiles are separable in x and y using Cartesian coordinates) or similarly as combinations of Laguerre–Gaussian modes (whose amplitude profiles are separable in r and θ using cylindrical coordinates).[2][3] At any point along the beam z these modes include the same Gaussian factor as the fundamental Gaussian mode multiplying the additional geometrical factors for the specified mode. However different modes propagate with a different Gouy phase which is why the net transverse profile due to a superposition of modes evolves in z, whereas the propagation of any single Hermite–Gaussian (or Laguerre–Gaussian) mode retains the same form along a beam.

Although there are other possible modal decompositions, these families of solutions are the most useful for problems involving compact beams, that is, where the optical power is rather closely confined along an axis. Even when a laser is not operating in the fundamental Gaussian mode, its power will generally be found among the lowest-order modes using these decompositions, as the spatial extent of higher order modes will tend to exceed the bounds of a laser's resonator (cavity). "Gaussian beam" normally implies radiation confined to the fundamental (TEM00) Gaussian mode.

Mathematical form

Gaussian beam profile with

The Gaussian beam is a transverse electromagnetic (TEM) mode.[4] The mathematical expression for the electric field amplitude is a solution to the paraxial Helmholtz equation.[1] Assuming polarization in the x direction and propagation in the +z direction, the electric field in phasor (complex) notation is given by:

where[1]

is the radial distance from the center axis of the beam,
is the axial distance from the beam's focus (or "waist"),
is the imaginary unit,
is the wave number (in radians per meter) for a free-space wavelength λ, and n is the index of refraction of the medium in which the beam propagates,
, the electric field amplitude (and phase) at the origin at time 0,
is the radius at which the field amplitudes fall to 1/e of their axial values (i.e., where the intensity values fall to 1/e2 of their axial values), at the plane z along the beam,
is the waist radius,
is the radius of curvature of the beam's wavefronts at z, and
is the Gouy phase at z, an extra phase term beyond that attributable to the phase velocity of light.

There is also an understood time dependence multiplying such phasor quantities; the actual field at a point in time and space is given by the real part of that complex quantity.

Since this solution relies on the paraxial approximation, it is not accurate for very strongly diverging beams. In most practical cases (where w0 >> λ/n) the above form is valid. Then the wave's associated magnetic field is everywhere directly proportional to the electric field and perpendicular to it[citation needed]. Since the electric field is taken to be polarized in the x direction, the magnetic field is polarized in the y direction according to:

where the constant η is the wave impedance of the medium in which the beam is propagating. For free space, η = η0 ≈ 377 Ω.

The intensity (or irradiance) distribution can then be found by evaluating the Poynting vector, which is entirely in the z direction:

where is the intensity at the center of the beam at its waist and the superscript * symbolizes the complex conjugate.

Evolving beam width

The Gaussian function has a 1/e2 diameter (2w as used in the text) about 1.7 times the FWHM.

At a position z along the beam (measured from the focus), the spot size parameter w is given by[1]

where[1]

is called the Rayleigh range as further discussed below.

The radius of the beam w(z), at any position z along the beam, is related to the full width at half maximum (FWHM) at that position according to:[5]

.

Evolving radius of curvature

The curvature of the wavefronts is zero at the beam waist and also approaches zero as z → ±∞. It is equal to 1/R where R(z) is the radius of curvature as a function of position along the beam, given by[1]

The radius of curvature is infinite at the beam waist
Focussed Gaussian beam (top) compared with a plane wave (bottom). The two are in phase on the left side, but π out of phase on the right.

Gouy phase

The Gouy phase of the beam at z is given by[1]

The Gouy phase results in an increase in the apparent wavelength near the waist. The phase velocity near the waist exceeds the speed of light in the medium, just as it can in a waveguide. The Gouy phase shift along the beam remains within the range ±π/2 (for a fundamental Gaussian beam) and is not observable in most experiments. However, it is of theoretical importance and takes on a greater range for higher-order Gaussian modes.[6]

For a fundamental Gaussian beam the integral of the Gouy phase from the far-field through the waist to the far-field is -π. This results in inversion of a signal that has passed through the waist, that corresponds to the inversion obtained with the ray-tracing approximation (Geometrical Optics).

Elliptical and astigmatic beams

Many laser beams have an elliptical cross-section. Also common are beams with waist positions which are different for the two transverse dimensions, called astigmatic beams. These beams can be dealt with using the above two evolution equations, but with distinct values of each parameter for x and y and distinct definitions of the z = 0 point. The Gouy phase is a single value calculated correctly by summing the contribution from each dimension, with a Gouy phase within the range ± π/4 contributed by each dimension.

An elliptical beam will invert its ellipticity ratio as it propagates from the far field to the waist. The dimension which was the larger far from the waist, will be the smaller near the waist.

Beam parameters

The geometric dependence of the fields of a Gaussian beam are governed by the light's wavelength λ (in the dielectric medium, if not free space) and the following beam parameters, all of which are connected as detailed in the following sections.

Beam waist

Gaussian beam width w(z) as a function of the distance z along the beam. w0: beam waist; b: depth of focus; zR: Rayleigh range; : total angular spread

The shape of a Gaussian beam of a given wavelength λ is governed solely by one parameter, the beam waist w0. This is a measure of the beam size at the point of its focus (z=0 in the above equations) where the beam width w(z) (as defined above) is the smallest (and likewise where the intensity on-axis (r=0) is the largest). From this parameter the other parameters describing the beam geometry are determined. This includes the Rayleigh range zR and asymptotic beam divergence θ, as detailed below.

Rayleigh range and confocal parameter

The Rayleigh distance or Rayleigh range zR is determined given a Gaussian beam's waist size:

.

Here is the wavelength of the light, n is the index of refraction. At a distance from the waist equal to the Rayleigh range zR, the width w of the beam is larger than it is at the focus where w = w0, the beam waist. That also implies that the on-axis (r=0) intensity there is one half of the peak intensity (at z=0). That point along the beam also happens to be where the wavefront curvature (1/R) is greatest.[1]

The distance between the two points z = ±zR is called the confocal parameter or depth of focus[citation needed] of the beam.

Beam divergence

Although the tails of a Gaussian function never actually reach zero, for the purposes of the following discussion the "edge" of a beam is considered to be the radius where r = w(z). That is where the intensity has dropped to 1/e2 of its on-axis value. Now, for the parameter increases linearly with . This means that far from the waist, the beam "edge" (in the above sense) is cone-shaped. The angle between lines along that cone (whose ) and the central axis of the beam () is called the divergence of the beam. It is given by[1]

Where n is the refractive index of the medium the beam propagates through, and is the free-space wavelength. The total angular spread of the beam far from the waist is then given by

Because the divergence is inversely proportional to the spot size, for a given wavelength λ, a Gaussian beam that is focused to a small spot diverges rapidly as it propagates away from the focus. Conversely, to minimize the divergence of a laser beam in the far field (and increase its peak intensity at large distances) it must have a large cross-section (w0) at the waist (and thus a large diameter where it is launched, since w(z) is never less than w0 ). This relationship between beam width and divergence is a fundamental characteristic of diffraction, and of the Fourier transform which describes Fraunhofer diffraction. A beam with any specified amplitude profile also obeys this inverse relationship, but the fundamental Gaussian mode is a special case where the product of beam size at focus and far-field divergence is smaller than for any other case.

Since the Gaussian beam model uses the paraxial approximation, it fails when wavefronts are tilted by more than about 30° from the axis of the beam.[7] From the above expression for divergence, this means the Gaussian beam model is only accurate for beams with waists larger than about .

Laser beam quality is quantified by the beam parameter product (BPP). For a Gaussian beam, the BPP is the product of the beam's divergence and waist size . The BPP of a real beam is obtained by measuring the beam's minimum diameter and far-field divergence, and taking their product. The ratio of the BPP of the real beam to that of an ideal Gaussian beam at the same wavelength is known as M2 ("M squared"). The M2 for a Gaussian beam is one. All real laser beams have M2 values greater than one, although very high quality beams can have values very close to one.

The numerical aperture of a Gaussian beam is defined to be , where n is the index of refraction of the medium through which the beam propagates. This means that the Rayleigh range is related to the numerical aperture by

Power and intensity

Power through an aperture

With a beam centered on an aperture, the power P passing through a circle of radius r in the transverse plane at position z is[8]

where

is the total power transmitted by the beam.

For a circle of radius , the fraction of power transmitted through the circle is

Similarly, about 90 percent of the beam's power will flow through a circle of radius , 95 percent through a circle of radius , and 99 percent through a circle of radius .[8]

Peak intensity

The peak intensity at an axial distance from the beam waist can be calculated as the limit of the enclosed power within a circle of radius , divided by the area of the circle as the circle shrinks:

The limit can be evaluated using L'Hôpital's rule:

Complex beam parameter

The spot size and curvature of a Gaussian beam as a function of z along the beam can also be encoded in the complex beam parameter [9][10] given by:

Introducing this complication leads to a simplification of the Gaussian beam field equation as shown below. It can be seen that the reciprocal of q(z) contains the wavefront curvature and relative on-axis intensity in its real and imaginary parts, respectively:[9]

The complex beam parameter simplifies the mathematical analysis of Gaussian beam propagation, and especially in the analysis of optical resonator cavities using ray transfer matrices.

Then using this form, the earlier equation for the electric (or magnetic) field is greatly simplified. If we call u the relative field strength of an elliptical Gaussian beam (with the elliptical axes in the x and y directions) then it can be separated in x and y according to:

where

,
,

where and are the complex beam parameters in the x and y directions.

For the common case of a circular beam profile, and , which yields[11]

Wave equation

As a special case of electromagnetic radiation, Gaussian beams (and the higher-order Gaussian modes detailed below) are solutions to the wave equation for an electromagnetic field in free space or in a homogeneous dielectric medium:[12] obtained by combining Maxwell's equations for the curl of E and the curl of H, resulting in:

where c is the speed of light in the medium, and could either refer to the electric or magnetic field vector, as any specific solution for either determines the other. The Gaussian beam solution is valid only in the paraxial approximation, that is, where wave propagation is limited to directions within a small angle of an axis. Without loss of generality let us take that direction to be the +z direction in which case the solution U can generally be written in terms of u which has no time dependence and varies relatively smoothly in space, with the main variation spatially corresponding to the wavenumber k in the z direction:[12]

Using this form along with the paraxial approximation, can then be essentially neglected. Since solutions of the electromagnetic wave equation only hold for polarizations which are orthogonal to the direction of propagation (z), we have without loss of generality considered the polarization to be in the x direction so that we now solve a scalar equation for u(x,y,z).

Substituting this solution into the wave equation above yields the paraxial approximation to the scalar wave equation:[12]

Gaussian beams of any beam waist w0 satisfy this wave equation; this is most easily verified by expressing the wave at z in terms of the complex beam parameter q(z) as defined above. There are many other solutions. As solutions to a linear system, any combination of solutions (using addition or multiplication by a constant) is also a solution. The fundamental Gaussian happens to be the one that minimizes the product of minimum spot size and far-field divergence, as noted above. In seeking paraxial solutions, and in particular ones that would describe laser radiation that is not in the fundamental Gaussian mode, we will look for families of solutions with gradually increasing products of their divergences and minimum spot sizes. Two important orthogonal decompositions of this sort are the Hermite–Gaussian or Laguerre-Gaussian modes, corresponding to rectangular and circular symmetry respectively, as detailed in the next section. With both of these, the fundamental Gaussian beam we have been considering is the lowest order mode.

Higher-order modes

Hermite-Gaussian modes

Twelve Hermite-Gaussian modes

It is possible to decompose a coherent paraxial beam using the orthogonal set of so-called Hermite-Gaussian modes, any of which are given by the product of a factor in x and a factor in y. Such a solution is possible due to the separability in x and y in the paraxial Helmholtz equation as written in Cartesian coordinates.[13] Thus given a mode of order (l,m) referring to the x and y directions, the electric field amplitude at x,y,z may be given by: where the factors for the x and y dependence are each given by:

where we have employed the complex beam parameter q(z) (as defined above) for a beam of waist w0 at z from the focus. In this form, the first factor is just a normalizing constant to make the set of uJ orthonormal. The second factor is an additional normalization dependent on z which compensates for the expansion of the spatial extent of the mode according to w(z)/w0 (due to the last two factors). It also contains part of the Gouy phase. The third factor is a pure phase which enhances the Gouy phase shift for higher orders J.

The final two factors account for the spatial variation over x (or y). The fourth factor is the Hermite polynomial of order ("physicists' form", i.e. ), while the fifth accounts for the Gaussian amplitude fall-off , although this isn't obvious using the complex q in the exponent. Expansion of that exponential also produces a phase factor in x which accounts for the wavefront curvature (1/R(z)) at z along the beam.

Hermite-Gaussian modes are typically designated "TEMlm"; the fundamental Gaussian beam may thus be referred to as TEM00 (where TEM stands for Transverse electro-magnetic). Multiplying ul(x,z) and um(y,z) to get the 2-D mode profile, and removing the normalization so that the leading factor is just called E0, we can write the (l,m) mode in the more accessible form:

.

In this form, the parameter w0, as before, determines the family of modes, in particular scaling the spatial extent of the fundamental mode's waist and all other mode patterns at z=0. Given that w0, w(z) and R(z) have the same definitions as for the fundamental Gaussian beam described above. It can be seen that with l=m=0 we obtain the fundamental Gaussian beam described earlier (since H0 = 1). The only specific difference in the x and y profiles at any z are due to the Hermite polynomial factors for the order numbers l and m. However, there is a change in the evolution of the modes' Gouy phase over z:

where the combined order of the mode N is defined as . While the Gouy phase shift for the fundamental (0,0) Gaussian mode only changes by ±π/2 radians over all of z (and only by ±π/4 radians between ±ZR), this is increased by the factor N+1 for the higher order modes.[6]

Hermite Gaussian modes, with their rectangular symmetry, are especially suited for the modal analysis of radiation from lasers whose cavity design is asymmetric in a rectangular fashion. On the other hand, lasers and systems with circular symmetry can better be handled using the set of Laguerre-Gaussian modes introduced in the next section.

Laguerre-Gaussian modes

Beam profiles which are circularly symmetric (or lasers with cavities that are cylindrically symmetric) are often best solved using the Laguerre-Gaussian modal decomposition.[3] These functions are written in cylindrical coordinates using generalized Laguerre polynomials. Each transverse mode is again labelled using two integers, in this case the radial index and the azimuthal index which can be positive or negative (or zero).

.

[14]

where are the generalized Laguerre polynomials. is a required normalization constant:

.

and have the same definitions as above. As with the higher-order Hermite-Gaussian modes the magnitude of the Laguerre-Gaussian modes' Gouy phase shift is exaggerated by the factor N+1:

where in this case the combined mode number . As before, the transverse amplitude variations are contained in the last two factors on the upper line of the equation, which again includes the basic Gaussian drop off in r but now multiplied by a Laguerre polynomial. The effect of the rotational mode number l, in addition to affecting the Laguerre polynomial, is mainly contained in the phase factor exp(-ilφ), in which the beam profile is advanced ( or retarded) by l complete 2π phases in one rotation around the beam (in φ). This is an example of an optical vortex of topological charge l, and can be associated with the orbital angular momentum of light in that mode.

Ince-Gaussian modes

In elliptic coordinates, one can write the higher-order modes using Ince polynomials. The even and odd Ince-Gaussian modes are given by [15]

where and are the radial and angular elliptic coordinates defined by

are the even Ince polynomials of order and degree where is the ellipticity parameter. The Hermite-Gaussian and Laguerre-Gaussian modes are a special case of the Ince-Gaussian modes for and respectively [15].

Hypergeometric-Gaussian modes

There is another important class of paraxial wave modes in cylindrical coordinates in which the complex amplitude is proportional to a confluent hypergeometric function.

These modes have a singular phase profile and are eigenfunctions of the photon orbital angular momentum. Their intensity profiles are characterized by a single brilliant ring; like Laguerre–Gaussian modes, their intensities fall to zero at the center (on the optical axis) except for the fundamental (0,0) mode. A mode's complex amplitude can be written in terms of the normalized (dimensionless) radial coordinate and the normalized longitudinal coordinate as follows:[16]

where the rotational index is an integer, and is real valued, is the gamma function and is a confluent hypergeometric function.

Some subfamilies of hypergeometric-Gaussian (HyGG) modes can be listed as the modified Bessel-Gaussian modes, the modified exponential Gaussian modes[17], and the modified Laguerre–Gaussian modes.

The set of hypergeometric-Gaussian modes is overcomplete and is not an orthogonal set of modes. In spite of its complicated field profile, HyGG modes have a very simple profile at the beam waist (z=0):

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i Svelto, pp. 153–5.
  2. ^ Siegman, p. 642.
  3. ^ a b probably first considered by Goubau and Schwering (1961).
  4. ^ Svelto, p. 158.
  5. ^ Hill, Dan (April 4, 2007). "How to Convert FWHM Measurements to 1/e-Squared Halfwidths". Radiant Zemax Knowledge Base. Retrieved June 7, 2016.
  6. ^ a b Paschotta, Rüdiger. "Gouy Phase Shift". Encyclopedia of Laser Physics and Technology. RP Photonics. Retrieved May 2, 2014.
  7. ^ Siegman (1986) p. 630.
  8. ^ a b Melles Griot. Gaussian Beam Optics
  9. ^ a b Siegman, pp. 638–40.
  10. ^ Garg, pp. 165–168.
  11. ^ See Siegman (1986) p. 639. Eq. 29
  12. ^ a b c Svelto, pp. 148–9.
  13. ^ Siegman (1986), p645, eq. 54
  14. ^ Allen, L. (June 1, 1992). "Orbital angular momentum of light and the transformation of Laguerre-Gaussian laser modes" (PDF). Physical Review A. 45 (11): 8185–8189. Bibcode:1992PhRvA..45.8185A. doi:10.1103/physreva.45.8185. PMID 9906912.
  15. ^ a b Bandres and Gutierrez-Vega (2004)
  16. ^ Karimi et. al (2007)
  17. ^ Karimi et. al (2007)

References