Laser-induced Dynamic: Gratings

: Localized heating that changes the medium's refractive index.

(LIDGs) are temporary optical structures created when two or more coherent laser beams interfere within a material. Unlike permanent gratings etched into glass, these "transient" patterns exist only while the light is present, making them vital for real-time optical processing. How They Work Laser-Induced Dynamic Gratings

: Two laser beams intersect in a photosensitive medium (solid, liquid, or gas). : Localized heating that changes the medium's refractive

: A third "probe" beam hits this temporary structure and is diffracted, allowing researchers to measure the material's internal dynamics in real-time. Key Applications Laser-Induced Dynamic Gratings | Springer Nature Link Laser-Induced Dynamic Gratings

: Ionization in gases or solids to create high-density electron patterns.

: Spatially varying excitation of atoms or molecules.

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