Abstract

Suppressing the impact of atmospheric turbulence on laser beam propagation is a bottleneck problem in the application of free space optical communications, with the primary difficulty being the lack of a quantitative description of the effect of turbulence on a laser beam. In this paper, we propose a quantitative description of the effect of turbulence and express a quantitative analysis of the effect of atmospheric turbulence on Bessel–Gaussian beam based on the extended Huygens–Fresnel principle. The results of numerical analysis confirm the validity of the theoretical description. This study also shows that the influence of turbulence is stronger when the annular shape of the Bessel–Gaussian beam is more obvious. The method also provides theoretical guidance for reverse engineering the amplitude and phase distribution of the initial laser beam, thereby effectively reducing the impact of atmospheric turbulence on laser beam propagation.

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