Abstract
The properties of ultrashort gaussian pulse propagation in a dispersive, attenuative medium are reviewed with emphasis on the pulse velocity. Of particular interest is the group velocity whose physical interpretation loses meaning in causally dispersive materials as the temporal pulse width decreases into the ultrashort pulse regime. A generalized definition of the group velocity that applies to ultrashort pulses in causally dispersive materials is provided by the centroid velocity of the pulse Poynting vector whose properties are described here. In particular, it is shown that this physical velocity measure approaches the group velocity for any value of the initial pulse carrier frequency and at any fixed value of the propagation distance in the limit as the initial pulse width increases indefinitely. This then provides a convenient measure for determining when the group velocity approximation is valid.
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