English

Fractal light from lasers

Optics 2019-01-30 v2 Pattern Formation and Solitons

Abstract

Fractals, complex shapes with structure at multiple scales, have long been observed in Nature: as symmetric fractals in plants and sea shells, and as statistical fractals in clouds, mountains and coastlines. With their highly polished spherical mirrors, laser resonators are almost the precise opposite of Nature, and so it came as a surprise when, in 1998, transverse intensity cross-sections of the eigenmodes of unstable canonical resonators were predicted to be fractals [Karman et al., Nature 402, 138 (1999)]. Experimental verification has so far remained elusive. Here we observe a variety of fractal shapes in transverse intensity cross-sections through the lowest-loss eigenmodes of unstable canonical laser resonators, thereby demonstrating the controlled generation of fractal light inside a laser cavity. We also advance the existing theory of fractal laser modes, first by predicting 3D self-similar fractal structure around the centre of the magnified self-conjugate plane, second by showing, quantitatively, that intensity cross-sections are most self-similar in the magnified self-conjugate plane. Our work offers a significant advance in the understanding of a fundamental symmetry of Nature as found in lasers.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1809.02501,
  title  = {Fractal light from lasers},
  author = {Hend Sroor and Darryl Naidoo and Steven W. Miller and John Nelson and Johannes Courtial and Andrew Forbes},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1809.02501},
  year   = {2019}
}

Comments

11 pages, 12 figures. arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:1308.4898

R2 v1 2026-06-23T03:58:03.330Z