Since first reports, two different spectral signatures have been observed from RLs. The
non-resonant emission (also referred as
incoherent or
amplitude-only emission) characterized by a single peaked spectrum with a
FWHM of few nanometers, and the
resonant emission (also referred as
coherent emission), characterized by multiple narrow peaks with sub-nanometer
linewidths, randomly distributed in frequency. The previous nomenclature is due to the interpretation of the phenomena, as the sharp resonances with sub-nanometer linewidths observed in
resonant regime suggested some kind of contribution from optical phase while the
non-resonant regime is understood as amplification of scattered light with no fixed phase relation between amplified photons. In general, the two regimes of operation are attributed to the scattering properties of the diffusive element in distributed feedback RLs: a weakly (highly) scattering medium, having a
transport mean free path much greater than (comparable to) the emission wavelength produce a
non-resonant (
resonant) random lasing emission. Recently it has been demonstrated that the regime of operation depends not only on the material in use but also on the pump size and shape. This suggested that the
non-resonant regime is actually consisting of a large number of narrow modes which overlap in space and frequency and are strongly coupled together, collapsing into a single peaked spectrum with narrowed
FWHM compared to the
gain curve and
amplified spontaneous emission. In
resonant regime, fewer modes are excited, they do not compete each other for gain and do not couple together. == Anderson localization ==