Paper
12 February 1993 Sensitivity limits of laser intracavity spectroscopy
Valery M. Baev, Peter E. Toschek
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Intracavity laser spectroscopy is one of the most sensitive techniques for absorption measurements. The main feature of this technique is that the narrow line absorber is placed in the cavity of a laser with large homogeneously broadened gain. Laser gain compensates only broadband cavity loss, such as mirror transmission, but is not affected by narrow line intracavity absorption (ICA). The laser light passes through the absorber many times and ICA is accumulated in its spectrum like in a multipass cell. The ultimate sensitivity of the emission spectrum of a multimode laser to ICA is limited by the laser pulse duration, nonlinear mode coupling, or by quantum noise. Multimode lasers which have been applied to ICA measurements, such as dye lasers, solid state lasers, and diode lasers show different sensitivity limits. These limits are determined by specific laser parameters and can be optimized individually for each laser. The highest sensitivity limit, 3 x 10 exp -10/cm, has been achieved with CW dye lasers so far. It is determined by nonlinear coupling of laser modes in the gain media. Quantum-limited sensitivity of this laser, which corresponds to 10 exp -12/cm, allows the measurement of the absorption of single atoms in the cavity.
© (1993) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Valery M. Baev and Peter E. Toschek "Sensitivity limits of laser intracavity spectroscopy", Proc. SPIE 1715, Optical Methods in Atmospheric Chemistry, (12 February 1993); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.140229
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Cited by 6 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Independent component analysis

Absorption

Semiconductor lasers

Dye lasers

Pulsed laser operation

Laser spectroscopy

Atmospheric chemistry

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