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Researchers Reveal Underlying Order of Chaos

By R&D Editors | March 18, 2016

A nonlinear Bessel beam. Courtesy of Miguel Ángel PorrasObserved for first time in solids in 1964 and in the air in 1994, the “light filamentation” phenomenon has been recently explained by researchers from the Complex Systems Group (GSC) at Universidad Politécnica de Madrid (UPM). The method they used is similar to the one used by Edward Lorenz when he explained the unpredictability of weather because of the butterfly effect, or what is the same thing, because of the extreme sensitivity to initial conditions.

Thanks to the new understanding of the complex “light filamentation” phenomenon from the approach of complex systems and chaos theory, new research projects will be boosted to control such “light filaments” and to improve their applications.

One of the goals of the Science of Complexity is to extract patterns of behavior where only disorder is observed, no matter if the object of study is physics, economy or social sciences. Experts from UPM, led by Professor Miguel Ángel Porras, suggested finding the underlying order “light filamentation.”

Against the natural tendency of light to scatter in all directions, a laser beam of sufficient power (various Gigawatt) tends to narrow and self-focus when it spreads out until it nearly collapses at a point. The high concentration of energy around that point achieves the ionization of air, and then a light filament emerges. This filament has a few micron diameters, where the light beam and the plasma channel move together, mutually trapped.

The light beam and the plasma channel interact in a highly nonlinear and dynamic balance over distances that can exceed tens of kilometers, until the electromagnetic energy ionized by the air is consumed.

What seems to be an intense beam of light at first glance is actually a complex behavior. If the laser power is high enough, various rays can be formed in random positions moving forward in parallel. When there is just one ray, it sometimes appears a continuous ray, but others can appear and disappear intermittently along its way. The ray can either appear or disappear in an unpredictable way, depending on the precise conditions of its generation.

To understand the behavior of filaments is essential to optimize their applications. Today, they are usually used to accurately cut and engrave micro and nanostructures in solid volumes, such as guides for other light waves. Besides, researchers have shown that these light beams can trigger and channel electric shocks storms, thus controlling the time and place where the lightning occurs.

Likewise, these light beams can be used as remote sensing of components and air pollutants, such as aerosols and ozone. The filaments generate terahertz radiation around, which is used in medicine and their interaction with certain molecules can produce X-rays.

The researchers involved have explained the different behaviors of the filaments in a unified way. The dynamic balance in the light filament occurs around an attractor that researchers have identified with a nonlinear Bessel beam. The chaotic or periodic behavior of a filament depends on the properties of this attractor.

When there is a chaotic attractor, such as the butterfly-shaped chaotic attractor, the filament shows the disorderly intermittency along its way and any fluctuation in generation conditions will allow researchers to predict where the attractor will appear or disappear. This new understanding of the phenomenon from the approach complex systems and the chaos theory will boost new research to improve the control of “light filaments” and their applications.

Citation: Miguel A. Porras, Carlos Ruiz-Jiménez, Juan Carlos Losada. “Underlying conservation and stability laws in nonlinear propagation of axicon-generated Bessel beams”. Physical Review A 92, 063826 (2015).

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