B Integral

In nonlinear optics, B-Integral is a measure of the nonlinear phase shift of light. It calculates the exponential growth of the least stable spatial frequency in a laser beam, and is the numerical equivalent of the nonlinear phase shift along the laser system's optical axis.

In a multipass laser system as a cumulative measure of the nonlinear interaction,[1] this integral is given by:

B=\frac{2\pi}{\lambda}\int \! n_2I(z)\,dz \,

where I(z) is the optical intensity along the beam axis, z the position in beam direction, and n_2 the nonlinear index quantifying the Kerr nonlinearity. As n_2I(z) is the nonlinear change in the refractive index, one easily recognizes the B integral to be the total on-axis nonlinear phase shift accumulated in a passage through the device. The B integral is frequently used in the context of ultrafast amplifiers, e.g. for optical components such as the Pockels cell of a regenerative amplifier.

See also

Kerr effect

References

  1. "B Integral". Encyclopedia of Laser Physics and Technology.


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