The Gaussian Beam Calculator calculates the beam half-width, Rayleigh range, and full-angular width of a Gaussian Beam (TEM00).
Picture 1, half-beam width
The TEM00 mode in a resonator has a Gaussian profile; the beam extends to infinity, but it quickly approaches 0 as it does so. As such, a common way to describe the "size" of the beam is its beam half-width (w). The beam half-width is the radial distance from the central axis where the electric field drops to 1e of its value at the central axis. I.e. E(w)=E0e. More generally, the electric field is shown by E(r)=E0e-r2w2, where r is the radial distance from the central axis. Since the intensity of a beam is proportional to the square of the Electric Field- I(r)=I0e-r2w2 - the Intensity is even more clumped up around the central axis, with I(w)=I0e2≈(.14)I0. This means that the majority of the beam's power is transferred where r≤w, which supports the use of w to define the size of a Gaussian beam.
By applying the definition of w to the solutions to a TEM00 in a resonator, we reach the equation4 w=w0√1+λ⋅zπ⋅w20, where z=0 at the "waist" of the beam, (w0). See Picture 1. The equation w(z) traces out a hyperbola, so it's more curved in the middle and approaches a straight line farther away.
We can rework w(z) to solve for w0:
w0=+√w2-λ⋅zπ
Picture 2, Rayleigh range
zR, the Rayleigh range, is the distance (zR) from the beam waist where the circle of radius w(zR) doubles in area compared to the area of the circle defined by the beam waist. In other words, zR≡z:w(z)=√2w0. See Picture 2. A smaller zR means the beam spreads faster. A larger zR means the beam spreads slower.
Using the definition of zR and the equation for w(z), we see5 that zR=πw20λ. As we can see from the equation for zR, beams with a smaller waist or larger wavelength spread faster. Beams with a larger waist or smaller wavelength spread slower.
Picture 3, full-angular width
For z>>zR, w(z) is roughly linear. This means we can approximate the angle Θ between the two edges of the beam very far from the waist. See Picture 3. With a quick limit and the small angle approximation, we conclude6 that Θ=2λπw0. Larger Θ means the beam spreads faster.
Θ is very much related to zR, and they tell us essentially the same thing about the spread of Gaussian Beams . Higher wavelength beams spread faster. Beams that were initially focused to a smaller waist spread faster.
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