Paper
21 July 1976 Damage Limits For Optical Components Exposed To Nanosecond Laser Pulses
Michael Bass
Author Affiliations +
Proceedings Volume 0076, Ultra High Power Lasers for Practicable Applications; (1976) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.954754
Event: 1976 SPIE/SPSE Technical Symposium East, 1976, Reston, United States
Abstract
The mechanisms which cause a damaging interaction between laser light and optical materials are reviewed. Their dependence on laser pulse duration and wavelength is discussed and available experimental results for short pulse damage thresholds are presented. It is shown that localized absorption in coatings, surface defects, or impurity inclusions generally determines the practical irradiance limit. Intrinsic non-linear processes such as avalanche breakdown or two photon absorption set the upper limit to the safe irradiance level.
© (1976) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Michael Bass "Damage Limits For Optical Components Exposed To Nanosecond Laser Pulses", Proc. SPIE 0076, Ultra High Power Lasers for Practicable Applications, (21 July 1976); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.954754
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KEYWORDS
Absorption

Pulsed laser operation

Laser induced damage

Laser damage threshold

Ionization

Glasses

High power lasers

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