Abstract

The theory of the laser amplifier is developed for conditions in which the strength of the input signal is increased from small values, where the amplification is linear, to larger values, where the amplification becomes nonlinear. The below-threshold laser amplifier oscillates at a single frequency equal to that of the input signal, and its properties are found by solution of the nonlinear equation of motion for the single excitation amplitude. For the above-threshold laser amplifier, the effects of the nonlinear behavior are to shift the laser frequency from its free-running value and to transfer intensity from the laser line to the signal frequency and to a range of satellite lines, whose frequency detunings are integer multiples of the signal detuning. The intensities of the various emission lines of the laser are calculated by power-series expansions of the field amplitudes up to terms of fourth order in the input signal strength. The onset of injection locking is determined by the conditions for which the intensity at the shifted free-running laser frequency falls to zero. The injection-locked state is characterized by a single excitation frequency equal to that of the input signal, and its properties are found by solution of the same nonlinear equation of motion as for the below-threshold amplifier. The ranges of input signal strength and detuning are determined for which the injection-locked state is stable. The energy conservation properties of the laser amplifier are considered for each of its operating states. \textcopyright{} 1996 The American Physical Society.

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