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7: Kerr-Lens and Additive Pulse Mode Locking

  • Page ID
    44664
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    There are many ways to generate saturable absorber action. One can use real saturable absorbers, such as semiconductors or dyes and solid-state laser media. One can also exploit artificial saturable absorbers. The two most prominent artificial saturable absorber modelocking techniques are called Kerr-Lens Mode Locking (KLM) and Additive Pulse Mode Locking (APM). APM is sometimes also called Coupled-Cavity Mode Locking (CCM). KLM was invented in the early 90’s [1][2][3][4][5][6][7], but was already predicted to occur much earlier [8][9][10]·

    • 7.1: Kerr-Lens Mode Locking (KLM)
      This page covers Kerr-Lens Mode Locking (KLM) in laser cavities, detailing its mechanisms like self-phase modulation and self-focusing to shorten pulses. It emphasizes laser resonator stability analyzed through ABCD matrices, with criteria for stable configurations and the interplay of mirror positions and radii of curvature. Three types of resonators (two-mirror, four-mirror) are discussed, alongside astigmatism compensation and the effects of Kerr lensing on beam waist.
    • 7.2: Additive Pulse Mode Locking
      This page discusses Additive Pulse Mode Locking (APM), which uses an artificial saturable absorber effect to shorten pulse duration in lasers through self-phase modulation and phase shifts. It also describes the nonlinear Mach-Zehnder interferometer's role in converting phase modulation to amplitude modulation.


    This page titled 7: Kerr-Lens and Additive Pulse Mode Locking is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Franz X. Kaertner (MIT OpenCourseWare) via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform.