Physical Review X (Jan 2023)

Optical Guiding in 50-Meter-Scale Air Waveguides

  • A. Goffin,
  • I. Larkin,
  • A. Tartaro,
  • A. Schweinsberg,
  • A. Valenzuela,
  • E. W. Rosenthal,
  • H. M. Milchberg

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevX.13.011006
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 1
p. 011006

Abstract

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The distant projection of high-peak and average-power laser beams in the atmosphere is a long-standing goal with a wide range of applications. Our early proof-of-principle experiments [Phys. Rev. X 4, 011027 (2014)PRXHAE2160-330810.1103/PhysRevX.4.011027] presented one solution to this problem, employing the energy deposition of femtosecond filaments in air to sculpt millisecond-lifetime sub-meter-length air waveguides. Here, we demonstrate air waveguiding at the 50-m scale, 60×longer, making many practical applications now possible. We employ a new method for filament energy deposition: multifilamentation of Laguerre-Gaussian LG_{01} “donut” modes. We first investigate the detailed physics of this scheme over a shorter 8-m in-lab propagation range corresponding to 13 Rayleigh lengths of the guided pulse. We then use these results to demonstrate optical guiding over 45 m in the hallway adjacent to the lab, corresponding to 70 Rayleigh lengths. Injection of a continuous-wave probe beam into these waveguides demonstrates very long lifetimes of tens of milliseconds.