Gas breakdown with 10.6-μ-wavelength CO2 laser radiation

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Abstract

The gas-breakdown threshold or the minimum power density required to ionize a gas with 10.6-μ-wave-length radiation has been examined using the radiation of a Q-switched CO2 laser. The studies show that the focused beam cannot initiate the breakdown process for intensities as high as 109 W/cm2. If an initial low degree of ionization is provided by an external source, the subsequent growth of the breakdown is in agreement with a cascade model as evidenced by the experimentally determined gas pressure and laser-radiation frequency dependence. © 1970 The American Institute of Physics.

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APA

Smith, D. C. (1970). Gas breakdown with 10.6-μ-wavelength CO2 laser radiation. Journal of Applied Physics, 41(11), 4501–4505. https://doi.org/10.1063/1.1658488

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