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Response of the atmospheric sodium layer to short optical pulse excitation

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Abstract

Some of the adaptive optics systems contemplated to ameliorate the effects of the atmospheric turbulence utilize guide stars. Guide stars are artificial beacons formed in the atmosphere by the interaction of a laser with matter in the atmosphere. Sodium guide stars are formed as a result of laser interaction with the sodium layer in the upper atmosphere. A small rf FEL is one of the candidates considered as a potential source capable of creating a sodium beacon. The pulse format of such a laser consists of trains of short optical pulses. The duration of an individual pulse is typically shorter than that of relevant relaxation times in the medium. The separation of the pulses may be longer or of the order of the relevant atomic memory time scale. To properly describe interactions of the atmospheric sodium layer with a laser characterized by such a pulse format one must utilize the optical Bloch equations (OBE). The OBE have been solved numerically using a simplified two-level model, and the resulting sodium layer response has been characterized. Additionally, an analytic solution has been obtained for the case in which both the population and coherence relaxation times are equal. The model is capable of providing useful insights.

© 1991 Optical Society of America

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