1969
DOI: 10.1109/jqe.1969.1076285
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Solid-state laser with vibrating reflector

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Cited by 3 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…The first one is the influence of oscillations on the generation and intensity of the laser radiation. It was extensively studied in many experiments, devoted, in particular, to such problems as the generation of optical pulses [24,25], phase locking of laser modes (where the frequencies of the mirror oscillations varied from 50 Hz [26] to 500 KHz [27,28] and 1 MHz [29,30], see the review in [31]), or modulation of the laser radiation [32,33] (in [33] the frequencies varied from 17 to 70 KHz). The theory of these phenomena was considered, e.g., in [34][35][36].…”
Section: Classical Fields In Cavities With Moving Boundariesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The first one is the influence of oscillations on the generation and intensity of the laser radiation. It was extensively studied in many experiments, devoted, in particular, to such problems as the generation of optical pulses [24,25], phase locking of laser modes (where the frequencies of the mirror oscillations varied from 50 Hz [26] to 500 KHz [27,28] and 1 MHz [29,30], see the review in [31]), or modulation of the laser radiation [32,33] (in [33] the frequencies varied from 17 to 70 KHz). The theory of these phenomena was considered, e.g., in [34][35][36].…”
Section: Classical Fields In Cavities With Moving Boundariesmentioning
confidence: 99%