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Gain (lasers)Gain (or amplification) in laser physics is a process, where the medium transfers part of its energy to the emitted electromagnetic radiation, resulting in an increase in laser power. This is basic principle of all lasers. Quantitatively, the ability of a laser medium to increase power of light is characterised with Gain. Additional recommended knowledge
DefinitionThe gain can be defined as the derivative of logarithm of power where In the quasi-monochromatic paraxial approximation, the gain can be taken into account with the following equation
where
Gain in Quasi two-level systemIn the simple quasi two-level system,
the gain can be expressed in terms of populations
where
Round-trip gain means gain multiplied by the length of propagation of the laser emission during a single round-trip.
In the case of gain varying along the length, the round-trip gain can be expressed with integral
The amplification coefficient
The gain and the amplification coefficient should not be confused with the magnification coefficient. The magnification characterizes the scale of enlarging of an image; such enlargement can be realized with passive elements, without gain medium. [1] Alternative terminology and notationsThere is no established terminology about gain and absorption. Everyone is free to use own notations, and it is not possible to cover all the systems of notations in a Wikipedia article. In radiophysics, gain may mean logarithm of the amplification coefficient. In many articles on laser physics, which do not use the amplification coefficient Some publications use term increment instead of gain and decrement instead of absorption coefficient to avoid the ambiguity[2], exploiting the analogy between paraxial propagaition of quasi-monochromatic waves and time evolution of a dynamic system. See also
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This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Gain_(lasers)". A list of authors is available in Wikipedia. |