Paper
7 May 1996 Effects of laser-induced breakdown, self-focusing, and plasma shielding on ultrashort-pulse propagation in the eye
Paul K. Kennedy, Ewan M. Wright, Quanyuan Feng, Kirk W. Cook, Daniel X. Hammer, Charles R. Thompson, Jerome V. Moloney, Benjamin A. Rockwell, Jeffrey J. Druessel, Alan C. Newell
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
As part of a research program to understand and model eye damage produced by exposure to subnanosecond laser pulses, an effort is currently being made to model and analyze ultrashort pulse propagation from the cornea to the retina. Both analytical models and numerical simulations are being used to analyze the effects of self-focusing, laser-induced breakdown (LIB), and plasma-pulse interaction. The modeling effort is coupled with experimental measurements of LIB thresholds and plasma shielding for visible, picosecond (psec) and femtosecond (fsec) pulses in water, which serves as a reasonable simulant for the vitreous humor of the eye. Comparison of LIB thresholds to the critical power for self-focusing indicates that self-focusing has little effect on LIB thresholds for long psec pulses. For short psec and fsec pulses, however, numerical simulations show that self-focusing is critical to LIB in water. These results indicate that self-focusing may play a role in fsec pulse ocular damage, by influencing whether LIB and plasma-pulse interaction occur at the retina, in the vitreous, or both. Both the location of the LIB event and the amount of plasma shielding can significantly effect the degree of damage.
© (1996) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Paul K. Kennedy, Ewan M. Wright, Quanyuan Feng, Kirk W. Cook, Daniel X. Hammer, Charles R. Thompson, Jerome V. Moloney, Benjamin A. Rockwell, Jeffrey J. Druessel, and Alan C. Newell "Effects of laser-induced breakdown, self-focusing, and plasma shielding on ultrashort-pulse propagation in the eye", Proc. SPIE 2681, Laser-Tissue Interaction VII, (7 May 1996); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.239600
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CITATIONS
Cited by 3 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Laser induced breakdown spectroscopy

Plasma

Eye

Eye models

Ionization

Numerical simulations

Dispersion

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