Experimental Studies of Instabilities and Chaos in Single-Mode, Inhomogeneously Broadened Gas Lasers

Author(s):  
N. B. Abraham ◽  
M. F. H. Tarroja ◽  
R. S. Gioggia
1998 ◽  
Vol 08 (05) ◽  
pp. 1025-1032
Author(s):  
V. G. Gudelev ◽  
L. P. Svirina ◽  
Yu. P. Zhurik

This paper presents the results of theoretical and experimental studies of a series of polarization dynamical phenomena in a single-mode standing-wave class-A laser with weakly anisotropic cavity at elliptically polarized eigenstates. The existence of spontaneous pulsations caused by the competition of active medium and empty cavity anisotropies is also proved.


Author(s):  
Homer L. Pryor ◽  
Thomas A. Furness ◽  
Erik Viirre

The Virtual Retinal Display (VRD) is a new display technology that scans modulated low energy laser light directly onto the viewer's retina to create a perception of a virtual image. This approach provides an unprecedented way to stream photons to the receptors of the eye, affording higher resolution, increased luminance, and potentially a wider field-of-view than previously possible in head coupled displays. The VRD uses video signals from a graphics board or a video camera to modulate low power coherent light from red, green and blue photon sources such as gas lasers, laser diodes and/or light emitting diodes. The modulated light is then combined and piped through a single mode optical fiber. A mechanical resonant scanner and galvanometer mirror then scan the photon stream from the fiber in two dimensions through reflective elements and semitransparent combiner such that a raster of light is imaged on the retina. The pixels produced on the retina have no persistence, yet they create the perception of a brilliant full color, and flicker-free virtual image. Developmental models of the VRD have been shown to produce VGA and SVGA image quality. This paper describes the VRD technology, the advantages that it provides, and areas of human factors research ensuing from scanning light directly onto the retina. Future applications of the VRD are discussed along with new research findings regarding the use of the VRD for people with low vision


1964 ◽  
Vol 5 (5) ◽  
pp. 97-98 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. D. White ◽  
E. I. Gordon ◽  
E. F. Labuda

2007 ◽  
Vol 593 ◽  
pp. 93-129 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. MEGERIAN ◽  
J. DAVITIAN ◽  
L. S. DE B. ALVES ◽  
A. R. KARAGOZIAN

This study provides a detailed exploration of the near-field shear-layer instabilities associated with a gaseous jet injected normally into crossflow, also known as the transverse jet. Jet injection from nozzles which are flush as well as elevated with respect to the tunnel wall are explored experimentally in this study, for jet-to-crossflow velocity ratiosRin the range 1 ≲R≤ 10 and with jet Reynolds numbers of 2000 and 3000. The results indicate that the nature of the transverse jet instability is significantly different from that of the free jet, and that the instability changes in character as the crossflow velocity is increased. Dominant instability modes are observed to be strengthened, to move closer to the jet orifice, and to increase in frequency as crossflow velocity increases for the regime 3.5 <R≤ 10. The instabilities also exhibit mode shifting downstream along the jet shear layer for either nozzle configuration at these moderately high values ofR. WhenRis reduced below 3.5 in the flush injection experiments, single-mode instabilities are dramatically strengthened, forming almost immediately within the shear layer in addition to harmonic and subharmonic modes, without any evidence of mode shifting. Under these conditions, the dominant and initial mode frequencies tend to decrease with increasing crossflow. In contrast, the instabilities in the elevated jet experiments are weakened as R is reduced below about 4, probably owing to an increase in the vertical coflow magnitude exterior to the elevated nozzle, untilRfalls below 1.25, at which point the elevated jet instabilities become remarkably similar to those for the flush injected jet. Low-level jet forcing has no appreciable influence on the shear-layer response when these strong modes are present, in contrast to the significant influence of low-level forcing otherwise. These studies suggest profound differences in transverse-jet shear-layer instabilities, depending on the flow regime, and help to explain differences previously observed in transverse jets controlled by strong forcing.


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