Composite CavityIf the cavity is non-empty (i.e. contains one or more elements with a non-unity refractive index), the values of L used are the optical path lengths of varying refractive indices. This is given by: where ni is the refractive index of the i'th element of length Li. More generally, the longitudinal modes may be found for any type of wave in a cavity by solving the relevant wave equation with the appropriate boundary conditions. Both transverse and longitudinal waves may have longitudinal modes when confined to a cavity. The analysis of longitudinal modes is especially important in lasers with single transversal mode, for example, in single-mode fiber lasers. The number of longitudinal modes of such a laser can be estimated as ratio of the spectral width of gain to the spectral separation of longitudinal modes. Power per longitudinal modeFor lasers with single transversal mode, the power per one longitudinal mode can be significantly increased at the coherent addition of lasers. Such addition allows both, to scale-up the output power of a single-transverse-mode laser, and to reduce number of longitudinal mode; because the system chooses automatically the only modes which are common for all the combined lasers. The reduction of the number of longitudinal modes determines the limits of the coherent addition; The ability to add coherently one laser more is exhausted, when of order of one longitudinal mode, common for the combined lasers, lies within the spectral width of the gain; the following addition will leads to the loss of efficiency of the coherent combining and will not increase the power per longitudinal mode of such a laser. See also
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