Gaussian beam - meaning and definition. What is Gaussian beam
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What (who) is Gaussian beam - definition

FIELD OF RADIATION (E.G. ELECTROMAGNETIC WAVE) WHOSE AMPLITUDE IS DESCRIBED BY THE GAUSSIAN FUNCTION
Beam waist; Diffraction limited beam; Guoy Phase Shift; Hermite-Gaussian mode; Laguerre-Gaussian; Laguerre-Gaussian modes; Laguerre-Gaussian mode; Gouy phase; Ince–Gaussian beam; Ince-Gaussian beam; Laguerre-Gaussian laser beam; Laguerre-Gaussian beam; Gouy phase shift
  • Gouy phase.
  • A Laguerre-Gaussian beam with l=1 and p=0
  • 2''w''}} as used in the text) about 1.7 times the [[FWHM]].
  • A diagram of a gaussian beam passing through a lens.

Gaussian function         
  • The [[discrete Gaussian kernel]] (solid), compared with the [[sampled Gaussian kernel]] (dashed) for scales <math>t = 0.5,1,2,4.</math>
  • 3d plot of a Gaussian function with a two-dimensional domain
MATHEMATICAL FUNCTION
Gaussian curve; Gaussian kernel; Gauss kernel; Error Curve; Error curve; Area under Gaussian curve; Area under the bell curve; Area under gaussian curve; Gauss curve; Integral of a Gaussian function; Integral of a Gaussian Function; Gauss bell
In mathematics, a Gaussian function, often simply referred to as a Gaussian, is a function of the base form
Gaussian blur         
  • This shows how smoothing affects edge detection. With more smoothing, fewer edges are detected
  • A [[halftone]] print rendered smooth through Gaussian blur
VISUAL EFFECT
Gaussian Blur; Gaussian interpolation; Gaussian smoothing; BLURRING FILTERS; Blurring technology
In image processing, a Gaussian blur (also known as Gaussian smoothing) is the result of blurring an image by a Gaussian function (named after mathematician and scientist Carl Friedrich Gauss).
Gaussian orbital         
Gaussian orbitals; Gaussian-type orbital; Molecular integrals
In computational chemistry and molecular physics, Gaussian orbitals (also known as Gaussian type orbitals, GTOs or Gaussians) are functions used as atomic orbitals in the LCAO method for the representation of electron orbitals in molecules and numerous properties that depend on these.

Wikipedia

Gaussian beam

In optics, a Gaussian beam is a beam of electromagnetic radiation with high monochromaticity whose amplitude envelope in the transverse plane is given by a Gaussian function; this also implies a Gaussian intensity (irradiance) profile. This fundamental (or TEM00) transverse Gaussian mode describes the intended output of most (but not all) lasers, as such a beam can be focused into the most concentrated spot. When such a beam is refocused by a lens, the transverse phase dependence is altered; this results in a different Gaussian beam. The electric and magnetic field amplitude profiles along any such circular Gaussian beam (for a given wavelength and polarization) are determined by a single parameter: the so-called waist w0. At any position z relative to the waist (focus) along a beam having a specified w0, the field amplitudes and phases are thereby determined as detailed below.

The equations below assume a beam with a circular cross-section at all values of z; this can be seen by noting that a single transverse dimension, r, appears. Beams with elliptical cross-sections, or with waists at different positions in z for the two transverse dimensions (astigmatic beams) can also be described as Gaussian beams, but with distinct values of w0 and of the z = 0 location for the two transverse dimensions x and y.

Arbitrary solutions of the paraxial Helmholtz equation can be expressed as combinations of Hermite–Gaussian modes (whose amplitude profiles are separable in x and y using Cartesian coordinates) or similarly as combinations of Laguerre–Gaussian modes (whose amplitude profiles are separable in r and θ using cylindrical coordinates). At any point along the beam z these modes include the same Gaussian factor as the fundamental Gaussian mode multiplying the additional geometrical factors for the specified mode. However different modes propagate with a different Gouy phase which is why the net transverse profile due to a superposition of modes evolves in z, whereas the propagation of any single Hermite–Gaussian (or Laguerre–Gaussian) mode retains the same form along a beam.

Although there are other possible modal decompositions, these families of solutions are the most useful for problems involving compact beams, that is, where the optical power is rather closely confined along an axis. Even when a laser is not operating in the fundamental Gaussian mode, its power will generally be found among the lowest-order modes using these decompositions, as the spatial extent of higher order modes will tend to exceed the bounds of a laser's resonator (cavity). "Gaussian beam" normally implies radiation confined to the fundamental (TEM00) Gaussian mode.