Kerr-induced self-focusing was first predicted in the 1960s and experimentally verified by studying the interaction of
ruby lasers with glasses and liquids. Its origin lies in the
optical Kerr effect, a non-linear process which arises in media exposed to intense electromagnetic radiation, and which produces a variation of the refractive index n as described by the formula n = n_0 + n_2 I, where
n0 and
n2 are the linear and non-linear components of the refractive index, and
I is the
intensity of the radiation. Since
n2 is positive in most materials, the refractive index becomes larger in the areas where the intensity is higher, usually at the centre of a beam, creating a focusing density profile which potentially leads to the collapse of a beam on itself. Self-focusing beams have been found to naturally evolve into a Townes profile Self-focusing beyond a threshold of power can lead to laser collapse and damage to the medium, which occurs if the radiation
power is greater than the critical power :P_{\text{cr}}= \alpha \frac{\lambda^2}{4 \pi n_0 n_2}, where λ is the radiation
wavelength in vacuum and α is a constant which depends on the initial spatial distribution of the beam. Although there is no general analytical expression for α, its value has been derived numerically for many beam profiles. and the critical power is Pcr ≈ 2.4 GW, corresponding to an energy of about 0.3 mJ for a pulse duration of 100 fs. For silica, n0 ≈ 1.453, n2 ≈ 2.4×10−20 m2/W, and the critical power is Pcr ≈ 2.8 MW. Kerr-induced self-focusing is crucial for many applications in laser physics, both as a key ingredient and as a limiting factor. For example, the technique of
chirped pulse amplification was developed to overcome the nonlinearities and damage of optical components that self-focusing would produce in the amplification of femtosecond laser pulses. On the other hand, self-focusing is a major mechanism behind
Kerr-lens modelocking,
laser filamentation in transparent media, self-compression of
ultrashort laser pulses, parametric generation, and many areas of laser-matter interaction in general. == Self-focusing and defocusing in gain medium ==