The lasing threshold is the lowest excitation level at which a laser's output is dominated by stimulated emission rather than by spontaneous emission. Below the threshold, the laser's output power rises slowly with increasing excitation. Above threshold, the slope of power vs. excitation is orders of magnitude greater. The linewidth of the laser's emission also becomes orders of magnitude smaller above the threshold than it is below. Above the threshold, the laser is said to be lasing. The term "lasing" is a back formation from "laser," which is an acronym, not an agent noun.
The lasing threshold is reached when the optical gain of the laser medium is exactly balanced by the sum of all the losses experienced by light in one round trip of the laser's optical cavity. This can be expressed, assuming steady-state operation, as
R1R2\exp(2gthresholdl)\exp(-2\alphal)=1
Here
R1
R2
l
\exp(2gthresholdl)
\exp(-2\alphal)
\alpha>0
The optical loss is nearly constant for any particular laser (
\alpha=\alpha0
gthreshold=\alpha0-
1 | |
2l |
ln(R1R2)
Since
R1R2<1
gthreshold
l
l
\alpha0
l
The analysis above is predicated on the laser operating in a steady-state at the laser threshold. However, this is not an assumption which can ever be fully satisfied. The problem is that the laser output power varies by orders of magnitude depending on whether the laser is above or below threshold. When very close to threshold, the smallest perturbation is able to cause huge swings in the output laser power. The formalism can, however, be used to obtain good measurements of the internal losses of the laser as follows:[2]
Most types of laser use one mirror that is highly reflecting, and another (called the output coupler) that is partially reflective. Reflectivities greater than 99.5% are routinely achieved in dielectric mirrors. The analysis can be simplified by taking
R1=1
ROC
2gthresholdl=2\alpha0l-lnROC
In most cases the pumping power required to achieve lasing threshold will be proportional to the left side of the equation, that is
Pthreshold\propto2gthresholdl
Pthreshold=K(L-lnROC)
where
L
L=2\alpha0l
K
L
In order to use this expression, a series of slope efficiencies have to be obtained from a laser, with each slope obtained using a different output coupler reflectivity. The power threshold in each case is given by the intercept of the slope with the x-axis. The resulting power thresholds are then plotted versus
-lnROC
L=2\alpha0l
gthreshold
One of the appealing features of this analysis is that all of the measurements are made with the laser operating above the laser threshold. This allows for measurements with low random error, however it does mean that each estimate of
Pthreshold
A good empirical discussion of laser loss quantification is given in the book by W. Koechner.[3]