Abstract
Recent theoretical, computational, and experimental work carried out at the Naval Research Laboratory on the propagation of ultra-short laser pulses in air is presented. Fully time-dependent, three-dimensional, nonlinear equations describing the propagation of laser pulses in air under the influence of diffraction, group velocity dispersion, Kerr nonlinearity, stimulated Raman scattering, ionization, and plasma wakefield excitation are presented and analyzed. The propagation code, HELCAP [P. Sprangle, J. R. Peñano, and B. Hafizi, Phys. Rev. E 66, 046418 (2002)], is used to simulate the propagation of laser pulses in air under the influence of the physical processes mentioned above. Simulations of laser filamentation together with experimental measurements are used to confirm that the filamentation process is dependent on pulse duration. An equilibrium configuration for optical and plasma filaments in air is derived and the dynamic guiding and spectral broadening of a laser pulse is modeled. The effect of atmospheric turbulence on nonlinear self-focusing is demonstrated. Simulations of a recent electromagnetic pulse (EMP) generation experiment are also presented and the efficiency of EMP generation is determined and found to be extremely small.
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