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CONFERENCEON
LASERS AND ELECTRO-OPTICS19-22 JUNE 1984
OSA/IEEEANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA
Digest of Technical Papers
UNIVERSITATSBIBLIOTHEKHANNOVER
TECHNISCHE>NFORMATIONSB<BLIOTHEKV
TUESDAY MORNING
19 June 1984 TUA
ANAHEIM HILTON AND TOWERSPACIFIC BALLROOM
8:40 AM CLEO/IQEC Joint Plenary Session
Herwig Kogelnik and Yuen-Ron ShenIQEC Conference CochairmenDean T. Hodges and William T. SllfvastCLEO Conference CochairmenPresiders
TUAA1 Quantum electronics: where we have been andwhere we may go CHARLES H. TOWNES 26
TUAA2 Quantum mechanical computers RICHARD P.FEYNMAN 26
Presentation of the 1984 Charles Hard Townes Award of theOptical Society of American to Veniamin P. Chebotaev andJohn L. Hall
DONALD R. HERRIOTT, Presenter 26
Presentation of the 1984 Quantum Electronics Award of theInstitute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers to Hermann A.Haus
PETER W. SMITH, Presenter 26
Introduction of the R. V. Pole Memorial Lecture, Erich Bloch,IBM Corp. 26
TUA3 Optical computing: how far can light waves pene-trate computer technology?- JOSEPH W. GOODMAN 26
TUA4 Lasers in modern industry ANTHONY J. DEMARIA 26
TUESDAY AFTERNOON
19 June 1984 TUB
SOUTHWEST EXHIBIT HALL
12:30 PM Poster Session: 1 Lasers—Laser Fusion
CO2 LASERS
TUB1 Line selection by injection in a TEA CO2 laserP. H. FLAMANT, ROBERT T. MENZIES, and E. N. KUIPER 26
TUB2 Chirp-free injection-locked operation of a compactTEA CO2 laser A. K. KAR, N. R. HECKENBERG, D. M.TRATT, and R. G. HARRISON 28
TUB3 Dynamics of line-tunable optically pumped NH3 las-ers H. D. MORRISON, B. K. GARSIDE, and J. REID 28
TUB4 Radio-frequency excited stripline CO and CO2
lasers A. GABAI, R. HERTZBERG, and S. YATSIV 28
TUB5 Design of efficient 4.3-/tm CO2 lasers R. K. BRIMA-COMBE and J. REID 30
TUB6 Novel techniques for CO2 waveguide laser construc-tion P. C. CONDER, J. R. REDDING, R. M. JENKINS, and T.W.SPENCER 30
TUB7 Preionization electron loss processes in a CO2 TEAlaser S. J. SCOTT and A. L. S. SMITH 30
TUBS High-resolution frequency measurement of an injec-tion-locked TEA CO2 laser P. CASSARD and J.-M. LOUR-TIOZ . 30
TUBS Sealed, miniaturized corona-preionized TEA CO2
lasers with pulse repetition frequencies up to 103 HzR. MARCHETTI, E. PENCO, and G. SALVETTI 32
OXYGEN-IODINE LASERS
TUB10 Experimental analysis of a small-scale chemicaloxygen-iodine laser J. BONNET, D. DAVID, E. GEORGES, B.LEPORCQ, D. PIGACHE, and C. VERDIER 32
TUB11 Analysis of oxygen-iodine lasers with deep reactorcooling M. V. ZAGIDULLIN, V. I. IGOSHIN, V. A. KATULIN,and N. L. KUPRIANOV 32
TUB 12 Cross-relaxation effects in low-pressure oxygen-iodine lasers M. V. ZAGIDULLIN, V. I. IGOSHIN, V. A. KATU-LIN, and N. L. KUPRIANOV 34
TUB13 Long-pulse iodine laser R. A. SHICK, L. D. SIE-BERT, and GEORGE E. BUSCH 34
RECOMBINATION LASERS
TUB14 Effects of electrode geometry on transversely excit-ed Sr+ recombination-laser performance M. BRANDT 34
SOLID-STATE LASERS
TUB15 Air-cooled simmered (^switched Nd:YAG laser withtransistor-gated flashlamp pulsing MATTI V. PAUONEN 34
TUB 16 O-switched pulse extension by electrooptical feed-back control M. J. P. PAYNE and H. W. EVANS 36
TUB17 Broadband laser output obtained by a bandpassing-selected oscillation WENYAN YU, YUXIA ZHENG, andGUANG MEI 36
TUB18 Stable-resonator polarized extracted TEM00 YAGlaser JINBO DU and XIUHUA LI 36
TUB19 Thermal lensing analysis of alexandrite laser rods bymoire deflectometry L. HOROWITZ, Y. B. BAND, O. KAFRI,and D. F. HELLER 36
TUB20 Generation of high-power nanosecond laser pulsesof continuously tunable duration using intracavity self-injectionand ferrite transmission lines HE WANG and DIAN-YUANFAN 38
TUB21 Laser emission of LiPrP4Oi2 single crystal C.SZAFRANSKI, W. STREK, and B. JEZOWSKA-TRZEBIATOW-SKA 38
RARE-GAS HALIDE LASERS
TUB22 Simple discharge XeCI laser GERARD J. ERNST 38
TUB23 Optimized e-beam-pumped KrF lasers as a functionof current density W. J. WITTEMAN and B. M. H. H. KLEI-KAMP 38
TUB24 Xe2CI fluorescence and absorption in self-sustainedXeCI lasers H. SHIELDS and A. JOHN ALCOCK 40
TUB25 Compression of KrCI excimer laser pulses in naph-thalene solutions Y. S. HUO, J. GLINSKI, X. J. GU, and R. F.CODE 40
TUB26 XeF laser physics and kinetics C. E. TURNER, JR.,TIEN TSAI YANG, J. A. BLAUER, and D. A. COPELAND 40
TUB27 Comparative study of electron-beam-initiated HFchemical laser and KrF excimer laser for ICF driver candida-tes TOMOO FUJIOKA, MINORU OBARA, FUMIHIKO KANNA-Rl, AKIRA SUDA, and TADASHI SUZUKI 42
TUB28 Original interferometer as a viable means for single-mode operation of UV excimer lasers E. ARMANDILLO,P. LOPATRIELLO, and G. GIULIANI 42
DYE-PUMP SOURCES
TUB29 Simple, inexpensive, high-repetition-rate tunablepicosecond dye laser V. MASILAMANI, L. POZZI, and F.DOCCHIO 42
TUB30 Solvent choices in dye lasers STEVEN D. KRAMERand CHUNG H. CHEN 42
TUB31 Surface discharge as an incoherent radiation sourcefor pumping pulsed lasers RAYMOND B. SCHAEFER andDOUGLAS G. YOUMANS 44
TUB32 Continuously tunable near-IR spectroscopic systemusing dye-laser-pumped H2 Raman lines YUJI KONNO,HIROMASA ITO, KINPUI CHAN, and HUMIO INABA 44
TUB33 New short-wavelength optical pump consisting ofMather-type dense plasma focus KYEKYOON KIM andJAMES J. FANNING 44
RESONATORS
TUB34 Misalignment effects in unstable optical resona-tors MARTIN E. SMITHERS, W. P. LATHAM, JR., and M. L.TILTON 46
TUB35 Selection of high-energy laser unstable-resonatordesign parameters using a scaling law approach R. C.WADE and S. W. ZELAZNY 46
TUB36 Injection locking and coherent summation of argon-ion lasers C. N. MAN and A. BRILLET 46
LASER FUSION
TUB37 Statistical optics applied to high-power glasslasers K. R. MANES and W. W. SIMMONS 48
TUB38 Laser-induced damage in index-matching liquids forharmonic conversion cells C. L. VERCIMAK, DAVID MILAM,and R. A. McGEE 48
TUB39 Beam profile control in the Omega laser system J.H. KELLY 48
TUB40 Electrooptically tuned harmonic generation for largeaperture switching of multipass laser systems M. A. HEN-ESIAN, J. GOLDHAR, and R. A. HAAS 48
TUB41 Nova laser-beam diagnostic data acquisition sys-tem D. W. MYERS, R. G. OZARSKI, J. R. RICHARDS, and J.L. WILKERSON 50
TUB42 Features and initial performance of automatic align-ment on the Nova fusion laser E. S. BLISS, P. J. VAN-ARSDALL, R. D. BOYD, C. D. SWIFT, and L. G. SEPPALA 50
TUB43 Generation of lithium plasmas for ion diodes by laserresonance absorption G. C. TISONE and J. K. RICE 52
TUB44 Imaging 20-100-keV x-ray emissions from laser fu-sion targets C. L. WANG, G. R. LEIPELT, and D. G. NILSON 52
TUESDAY AFTERNOON
19 June 1984 TUC
ROOM A
1:30 PM Lasers for Material Processing
David A. Belforte, Presider
TUC1 Single-mode propagation of high-power laser light inhollow metal waveguides ELSA GARMIRE, G. CHRYSOSTO-MOU, S. T. YAU, and B. MARTORELL 52
TUC2 5-kW CO2 laser for a welding system S. IKUTA, S.FUJIWARA, H. SASAKI, M. AIHARA, S. OBOKATA, and S.MITSUHIRA 52
TUC3 20-kW fast-axial-flow CO2 laser with high-frequencyturboblowers H. SUGAWARA, K. KUWABARA, S. TAKEMO-Rl, A. WADA, K. SASAKI, and S. SHIONO 54
TUC4 Industrial 20-kW cw CO2 SAGE laser N. TABATA, H.NAGAI, H. YOSHIDA, M. HISHII, M. TANAKA, Y. MYOI, and T.AKIBA 54
TUESDAY AFTERNOON
19 June 1984 TUD
ROOM B
1:30 PM Optical Storage: 1
Gordon R. Knight, Presider
TUD1 Reversible optical media storage systems MARK H.KRYDER 54
TUD2 Optical videodisk players employing a diode laserwith a high-frequency current superposition noise-reductionmethod AKIRA ARIMOTO, MASAHIRO OJIMA, NAOKI CHI-NONE, and AKIO OISHI 56
TUD3 Laser noise suppression for optical disk reading byfeedback of the laser beam S. NAGAI, T. TANAKA, S. KAKI-MOTO, S. HORIUCHI, K. YAMASHITA, S. NITA, K. TAMARI, T.SOGO, and S. TAKAMIYA 56
TUD4 Magnetooptic-type erasable disk memory S. Ml-YAOKA, N. SATO, and Y. AOKI 56
TUESDAY AFTERNOON
19 June 1984 TUE
ROOM C
1:30 PM Compression of Picosecond Pulses
Erich P. Ippen, Presider
TUE1 410-Fsec frequency-doubled Nd:YAG laser pulses ob-tained by single-stage pulse compression A. M. JOHNSON,R. H. STOLEN, and W. M. SIMPSON 58
TUE2 Five times compression of mode-locked argon-ionlaser pulses CHARLES G. DUPUY and PHILIPPE BADO 58
TUE3 Applications of tunable femtosecond pulse comp-ression D. GRISCHKOWSKY 58
TUE4 Compression of optical pulses chirped by self-phasemodulation in fibers W. J. TOMLINSON, R. H. STOLEN, andC. V. SHANK 58
TUE5 Observation of picosecond pulse structures using op-tical frequency modulation M. VAMPOUILLE, A. BARTHE-LEMY, C. FROEHLY, and B. COLOMBEAU 60
TUESDAY AFTERNOON
19 June 1984 TUF
ROOM E
1:30 PM Advanced Spectroscopic Techniques for AtmosphericRemote Sensing
Robert T. Menzies, Presider
TUF1 High-resolution spectroscopy of the atmosphere fromthe Space Shuttle: the ATMOS experiment CROFTON B.FARMER 60
TUF2 High-resolution stratospheric monitoring using a bal-loon-borne tunable diode laser spectrometer CHRISTOPHERR. WEBSTER and ROBERT T. MENZIES 60
TUF3 Effective utilization of tunable diode lasers: the laserheterodyne spectrometer STEPHEN J. KATZBERG, DON M.ROBINSON, HERBERT R. KOWITZ, CARROLL W. ROWLAND,and JACK LARSEN 60
TUF4 Laser-calibrated Fourier spectrometer transmissome-ter W. M. GUTMAN, J. A. DOWLING, K. O. WHITE, and G.AUTH 62
TUF5 Spectroscopy of hydrazines for laser remote sensingWILLIAM B. GRANT and LUISA T. MOLINA 62
TUESDAY AFTERNOON
19 June 1984 TUG
ROOM A
3:45 PM High-Performance Optical Scanners
T. C. Strand, Presider
TUG1 Multiple scanning in laser xerography H. SONNEN-BERG 64
TUG2 High-speed image sensor using holographic laserscanners N. NISHIDA, Y. OHTA, Y. ONO, K. KOSUGE, S.SUGAMA, M. FUJIWARA, K. KUBOTA, K. KAWAI, M. SAKA-GUCHI, H. KOBAYASHI, H. MIYAZAKI, and K. SHIRAKABE 64
TUG3 Acoustooptic phase reversal for doubling the resolu-tion of the Scophony laser scanner R. V. JOHNSON, J. M.GUERIN, and M. E. SWANBERG 64
TUG4 Phased-array beam steering and spectrum spreadingconcept for near optical frequencies D. D. CROMBIE, JOHNE. HERSHEY, and RAO YARLAGADDA 66
TUG5 Liquid crystal display projector using a copper laserbrightness amplifier KAZUO KURODA, TSUTOMU SHIMU-RA, SABURO KAMIYA, and IWAO OGURA 66
TUESDAY AFTERNOON
19 June 1984 TUH
ROOM B
3:45 PM Special Symposium on New Commercial Optical StorageSystems
Robert C. Durbeck, Presider
TUH1 Laserdrive 1200 optical recording system MAAR-TEN R. DE HAAN and Dl CHEN 66
TUH2 Optimem 1000 optical disk drive GORDON R.KNIGHT 68
TUH3 Large capacity optical disk memory for coded datastorage YOSHITO TSUNODA and ZENJI TSUTSUMI 68
TUH4 Storage Technology 7600 optical storage subsys-tems DONALD S. SWATIK 68
TUH5 Optical read-only digital memory media PAUL E.DAY 68
TUESDAY AFTERNOON
19 June 1984 TUI
ROOM C
3:45 PM Ultra High-Speed Optoelectronics
Gerard A. Mourou, Presider
TUI1 Generation and detection of subpicosecond electro-magnetic transients D. H. AUSTON, K. P. CHEUNG, J. A.VALDMANIS, D. A. KLEINMAN. and P. R. SMITH 70
TUI2 Subpicosecond electrooptic sampling using coplanarstrip transmission lines K. E. MEYER and GERARD A.MOUROU 70
TUI3 Generation of pulsed microwave signals by picosec-ond optoelectronic switching C. S. CHANG, M. C. JENG, M.J. RHEE, CHI H. LEE, A. ROSEN, and H. DAVIS 70
TUI4 Mode locking of an InGaAsP/lnP diode-Ti:LiNbO3
waveguide-switch composite cavity laser G. EISENSTEIN,ROD C. ALFERNESS, S. K. KOROTKY, R. S. TUCKER, IVAN P.KAMINOW, L. L. BUHL, and J. J. VESELKA 72
TUI5 Planar GaAs PIN photodiode with picosecond time res-ponse W. LENTH, A. CHU, L. J. MAHONEY, R. W. McCLEL-LAND, R. W. MOUNTAIN, and D. J. SILVERSMITH 72
TUESDAY AFTERNOON
19 June 1984 TUJ
ROOM E
3:45 PM Lidar Remote Sensing in Europe
William B. Grant, Presider
TUJ1 NO2-SO2 differential absorption lidar for routine emis-sion and immission measurements W. LAHMANN, W.STAEHR, C. WEITKAMP, and W. MICHAELIS 74
TUJ2 Lidar measurements of the HCI distribution in theplume of incineration ships H.-J. HEINRICH, C. WEITKAMP,W. LAHMANN, and W. MICHAELIS 74
TUJ3 Lidar research and applications in Europe P. H.FLAMANT 74
TUJ4 Monitoring of the stratospheric ozone layer by laserradar J. WERNER, K. W. ROTHE, and H. WALTHER 74
TUJ5 Measurements of strong fluctuations in intensity inlaser propagation through atmospheric turbulence: correc-tion for the nonlinearity of the receiving apparatus ANNACONSORTINI, F. GULISANO, E. BRICCOLANI, and G. CON-FORTI 76
TUESDAY EVENING
19 June 1984 ' SPECIAL
ROOM B
8:00 PM Special Session: Does the Laser Industry Need a TradeAssociation?
Jeff Hecht, Moderator
Panel discussion 76
WEDNESDAY MORNING
20 June 1984 WA
ROOM A
8:15 AM Advanced Solid-State Lasers
W. B. Jones, Presider
WA1 Modern solid-state laser materials WILLIAM F.KRUPKE 76
WA2 Recent advances in solid-state lasers PETER F.MOULTON 76
WA3 Flashlamp-pumped O-switched Nd/Cr:GdScGa-garnetlaser EDWARD REED and EDWARD G. ERICKSON 78
WA4 Nd3+:Gd3Ga5O12 slab laser N. WADA, M. ABE, andT. HONDA 78
WA5 Room temperature Dy:YLF laser at 4.34 fim N. P.BARNES, L. ESTEROWITZ, and R. E. ALLEN 78
WEDNESDAY MORNING
20 June 1984 WB
ROOM B
8:15 AM Optical Storage: 2
Maarten R. de Haan, Presider
WB1 Design of the echo spot size and optical focusing in au-tomated laser-tracking YUANHAI YANG 78
WB2 Evaluation of a diffraction-limited plastic biasphericobjective lens KENJI SHINTANI and SHIGEO KUBOTA 78
WB3 Plastic aspheric lens for the Compact Disc systemTOSHIHIKO KIRIKI, NAOKI IZUMIYA, KUNIO SAKURAI, andTADASHIKOJIMA 80
WB4 Toward new information systems JOHN ROBINSON,JEAN LEDIEU, PHILIPPE POPOFF, and FRANCOIS LECARVEN-NEC 80
WEDNESDAY MORNING
20 June 1984 WC
ROOM C
8:15 AM Picosecond and Femtosecond Lasers
Jonathan P. Heritage, Presider
WC1 Infrared picosecond sources T. ELSAESSER, H. J.POLLAND, A. SEILMEIER, and W. KAISER 80
WC2 High average power mode-locked operation of Co:MgF2 and Ni:MgF2 lasers BURT C. JOHNSON, PETER F.MOULTON, A. MOORADIAN, and M. ROSENBLUH 82
WC3 Passive mode locking in the presence of group veloci-ty dispersion and self-phase modulation R. L. FORK, S. P.GORDON, and O. E. MARTINEZ 82
WC4 Gain saturation and spontaneous emission in the dy-namics of active mode locking G. H. C. NEW and J. M.CATHERALL 82
WC5 Femtosecond pulse generation in a linear cavity termi-nated by an antiresonant ring J.-C. DIELS, H. VANHER-ZEELE, and R. TORTI 84
WEDNESDAY MORNING
20 June 1984 WD
ROOM E
8:15 AM Laser Chemical Physics: 1
Howard R. Schlossberg, Presider
WD1 Laser-controlled surface modification using a liquidoverlayer TERENCE DONOHUE 84
WD2 Photophysics of laser dissociation of surface molecu-les JAMES P. COWIN, IAN HARRISON, JOHANNES SEG-NER, PAUL YOUNG, and JOHN C. POLANYI 84
WD3 Optical second-harmonic generation for surface studi-es YUEN-RON SHEN 84
WD4 Progress in surface photoacoustic wave spectroscopyof thin films S. R. J. BRUECK, THOMAS F. DEUTSCH, and D.E. OATES 86
WD5 Hole-burning spectroscopy as a probe of phototautom-erization dynamics in phthalocyanine systems W. E. MOER-NER, M. ROMAGNOLI, V. Y. LEE, F. M. SCHELLENBERG, M. D.LEVENSON, and GARY C. BJORKLUND 86
WEDNESDAY MORNING
20 June 1984 WDD
ANAHEIM MARRIOTT HOTELSALON G
8:15 AM CLEO/IQEC Joint SymposiumFree Electron Lasers: 1
C. A. Brau, Presider
WDD1 Visible free-electron laser at Orsay J. M. ORTEGA,M. BILLARDON, P. ELLEAUME, C. BAZIN, M. BERGHER, Y.PETROFF, and M. VELGHE 126
WDD2 Storage ring operation of free-electron laser with aphase area displacement wiggler M. N. ROSENBLUTH, H.VERNON WONG, and B. N. MOORE 126
WDD3 Results of the TRW/Stanford tapered wiggler oscilla-tor experiments JOHN EDIGHOFFER, GEORGE R. NEIL,STEVE FORNACA, TODD SMITH, CARL HESS, and ALANSWETTMAN 126
WDD4 Free-electron laser project at AT&T Bell Laborato-ries E. D. SHAW and R. J. CHICHESTER 126
WEDNESDAY MORNING
20 June 1984 WE
ROOM A
10:30 AM Slab-Geometry Solid-State Lasers
William F. Krupke, Presider
WE1 Solid-state slab lasers W. B. JONES 86
WE2 Phase deviation and beam divergence of a large aper-ture resonator beam M. K. CHUN and W. B. JONES 88
WE3 Active-mirror amplifier for high-average-power Nd:glass laser systems DAVID C. BROWN, KOTIK K. LEE, andJERRY KUPER 88
WE4 Scaling laws for ordinary and sandwich slab-laser devi-ces DAVID C. BROWN and KOTIK K. LEE 88
WE5 ' Amplified spontaneous emission in slab lasersDAVID C. BROWN, K. J. KUHN, and ROBERT L. BYER 88
WEDNESDAY MORNING
20 June 1984 WF
ROOM B
10:30 AM Combustion Diagnostics
Donald W. Sweeney, Presider
WF1 Multiphoton excitation and fluorescence detection formonitoring of H and CO in atmospheric flames M. ALDEN, S.SVANBERG, S. WALLIN, W. WENDT, ARTHUR L. SCHAW-LOW, and P.-L. ZHANG 90
WF2 Measurements of fluctuating temperatures in a super-sonic turbulent flow using two-photon laser-induced fluo-rescence K. P. GROSS and R. L. McKENZIE 90
WF3 Temperature field measurements in combustion gasesusing planar laser-induced fluorescence JERRY M. SEITZ-MAN, GEORGE KYCHAKOFF, and RONALD K. HANSON 92
WF4 Quantitative photothermal deflection spectroscopy ina flowing stream of gas JEFFREY A. SELL 92
WF5 Collection efficiency anomalies in optogalvanic detec-tion of radicals in flames J. E. M. GOLDSMITH 92
WF6 Computer-controlled tunable diode laser system forthe characterization of cigarette filter ventilation CHARLESN. HARWARD, MILTON E. PARRISH, and GUNARS VILCINS 92
WEDNESDAY MORNING
20 June 1984 WG
ROOM C
10:30 AM High-Speed Electrooptic Devices and Materials
David M. Bloom, Presider
WG1 Picosecond electrooptic devices TETSURO KOBAY-ASHI and TADASI SUETA 94
WG2 100-psec optical modulation in multiple quantumwells T. H. WOOD, C. A. BURRUS, D. A. B. MILLER, D. S.CHEMLA, T. C. DAMEN, A. C. GOSSARD, and W. WIEGMANN 94
WG3 Auger recombination in GalnAsP and GalnAscompounds E. WINTNER and ERICH P. IPPEN 96
WG4 Picosecond optoelectronics in high-speed logic cir-cuits R. K. JAIN and K. STENERSEN 96
WG5 Bandwidth-limited single-mode picosecond opticalpulses with highly rf-modulated distributed-feedback InGaAsPdiode lasers NORIAKI ONODERA, HIROMASA ITO, andHUMIOINABA 96
WEDNESDAY MORNING
20 June 1984 WH
ROOM E
10:30 AM Optical Fiber Properties
C. Martin Stickley, Presider
WH1 Interferometric measurement of optical fiber transittime D. J. ALBARES 98
WH2 130 km-long fault location for single-mode optical fi-bers using a 1.55-Mm O-switched Erglass laser MASATA-KA NAKAZAWA, MASAMITSU TOKUDA, SHUNJI KISHIDA,and HISAYOSHI TORATANI 98
WH3 Materials science and engineering in lightguide tech-nology P. A. FLEURY 100
WH4 Status of polarization-preserving fibers S. C. RASH-LEIGH and R. H. STOLEN 100
WEDNESDAY MORNING
20 June 1984 WHH
ANAHEIM MARRIOTT HOTELSALON G
10:30 AM CLEO/IOEC Joint SymposiumFree Electron Lasers: 2
W. B. Colson, Presider
WHH1 High-power operation of the Los Alamos free-elec-tron laser oscillator BRIAN E. NEWNAM, R. W. WARREN, W.E. STEIN, J. G. WINSTON, R. L. SHEFFIELD, J. S. FRASER, J.E. SOLLD, J. C. GOLDSTEIN, J. M. WATSON, and C. A. BRAU 127
WHH2 U. K.: Free-electron laser project C. R. PIDGEON,S. D. SMITH, W. J. FIRTH, D. JAROSZINSKI, D. M. TRATT, J.MACKAY, M. KIMMETT, J. M. REID, M. G. KELLIHER, M. W.POOLE, G. SAXON, R. P. WALKER, and W. A. GILLESPIE 127
WHH3 Electromagnetic instabilities in free-electron las-ers M. N. ROSENBLUTH 127
WHH4 Effect of betatron oscillations on the 3-D radiationfields in a free-electron laser oscillator CHA-MEI TANG andP. SPRANGLE 127
WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON
20 June 1984 Wl
ROOM A
1:30 PM Cr3+Tunable Lasers
Peter F. Moulton, Presider
WI1 Tunable laser action in Cr:ZnWO4 near 1-^m wave-length W. KOLBE, K. PETERMANN, and G. HUBER 100
WI2 Tunability of the Cr3+:GSGG laser B. STRUVE and G.HUBER 102
WI3 Characterization of emerald lasers SHUI T. LAI andMICHAEL L. SHAND 102
WI4 High-power performance of alexandrite lasers D. F.HELLER and J. C. WALLING 102
WI5 High-pressure mercury arc lamp excited cw alexandritelasers H. SAMELSON and D. J. HARTER • 102
WI6 New developments in high-power high-repetition-rateinjection-locked alexandrite lasers R. C. SAM, W. R. RAPO-PORT, and S. MATTHEWS 102
WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON
20 June 1984 WJ
ROOM B
1:30 PM Flow Diagnostics
James D. Trolinger, Presider
WJ1 Fiber optics for laser velocimetry and holography R.G. W. BROWN, R. K. Y. CHAN, M. CORKE, J. D. C. JONES, D.A. JACKSON, and A. D. KERSEY 104
WJ2 Spatially resolved two-component flow-velocity mea-surements with inverse Raman spectroscopy H. MOOSMUL-LER, G. C. HERRING, and C. Y. SHE 104
WJ3 Flow-velocity measurements with stimulated Rayleigh-Brillouin gain spectroscopy G. C. HERRING, H. MOOSMUEL-LER, S. A. LEE, and C. Y. SHE 104
WJ4 Applications of lasers to gas centrifuge diag-nostics S. W. ALLISON and M. R. CATES 106
WJ5 Experimental optical tomography K. BENNETT, G. W.FARIS, and ROBERT L. BYER 106
WJ6 Investigation of air plasmas driven by high-intensityshort-duration laser pulses J. A. McKAY, T. J. WIETING, B.S. HOLMES, H. S. JANEE, H. H. KING, K. A. LUDWIG, T. L.MENNA, C. T. WALTERS, B. E. CAMPBELL, F. W. FRENCH, G.W. ZEIDERS, J. P. REILLY, E. R. PUGH, G. A. SIMONS, G. A.GURTMAN, J. R. TRIPLETT, M. H. RICE, B. E. FREEMAN, and P.R. ROHR 106
WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON
20 June 1984 WK
ROOM C
1:30 PM Optical Communications Systems
Melvin I. Cohen, Presider
WK1 100-Mbit/sec 4-ary frequency shift key modulation ofa GaAIAs semiconductor diode laser D. WELFORD and S. B.ALEXANDER 108
WK2 Optical two-way communication system using rotarycouplers NOBORU ITO and TOSHIAKI NUMAZAKI 108
WK3 Recent results in coherent optical communicationVINCENT W. S. CHAN 108
WK4 Wavelength division multiplexing fiber-optic data sys-tem utilizing both AIGaAs and InGaAsP semiconductor-laserwavelengths for future space station applications HERBERTD. HENDRICKS and NICHOLAS D. MURRAY 110/
WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON
20 June 1984 WL
ROOM E
1:30 PM Laser Techniques for Atmospheric Measurements
Chester S. Gardner, Presider
WL1 Doppler lidar remote sensing of atmospheric winds:application to weather forecasting and wind shear detec-tion T. RHIDIAN LAWRENCE and FREEMAN F. HALL, JR. 110
WL2 Correlation measurements of the ocean surface re-flections who, i using a mode-locked multiple wavelength Nd:YAG', ansmitter JAMES B. ABSHIRE, JAN F. McGARRY, BINM.TS.AI, and CHESTER S.GARDNER 110
WL3 Random-modulation cw lidar using an optical fiberhead , IOBUO TAKEUCHI, HIROSHI BABA, KATSUMI SAKU-RAI, and TOSHIYUKI UENO 112
WL4 Narrow-bandwidth lidar system for hydroxyl measure-ments: design and performance specifications I. STUARTMcDERMID, JAMES B. LAUDENSLAGER, and THOMAS J.PACALA 112
WL5 Coherent forward-scattering nephelometer LEONIDG. KAZOVSKY 112
WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON
20 June 1984 WMM
ANAHEIM MARRIOTT HOTELSALON G
1:30 PM CLEO/IQEC Joint SymposiumFree Electron Lasers: 3
John M. J. Madey, Presider
WMM1 Tutorial on free-electron lasers W. B. COLSON 127
WMM2 Classical vs quantum noise in the start-up of free-electron lasers W. BECKER and J. K. MclVER 128
WMM3 Instability and quantum initiation in the free-electronlaser M. V. BELLANO, R. BONIFACIO, and F. CASAGRANDE 128
WMM4 Two-cavity optical klystron C.K.CHEN 128
WMM5 Simplified analysis of spontaneous and stimulatedemission for various free-electron laser configurations L. K.GROVER and R. H. PANTELL 129
WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON
20 June 1984 WM
ROOM A
3:45 PM Nd3+ Solid-State Lasers and Theory
G. Huber, Presider
WM1 High-power Nd:YLF laser performance M. KNIGHTS,G. RINES, J. MCCARTHY, T. POLLAK, K. A. SMITH, and E. P.CHICKLIS 114
WM2 Gain and parasitic suppression in Nd:YLF G. RINES,M. THOMAS, M. KNIGHTS, E. P. CHICKLIS, and W. SEKA 114
WM3 Monolithic single-mode Nd:YAG ring laser T. J.KANE, ROBERT L. BYER, and B. K. ZHOU 114
WM4 Chaotic emission of solid-state lasers in muWtransver-saknode operation C. JUNG, F. HOLUNGER, and H. WEBER 116
WM5 Field structure, far-field divergence, and efficiency ofhigh-power solid-state lasers F. HOLUNGER and H. WEBER 116
WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON
20 June 1984 WN
ROOM B
3:45 PM Symposium on Industrial Applications of Lasers
C. Murray Penney, Presider
WN1 Why use lasers in manufacturing? S. S. CHAR-SCHAN 118
WN2 Laser sensors for automated welding N. R. CORBY 118
WN3 Low-loss optical fiber-based remote sensing of inflam-mable, explosive, and polluting gases by near-infrared absorp-tion over a wide area HUMIO INABA, KINPUI CHAN, andHIROMASAITO 118
WN4 Lasers and electrooptics for automated manufactur-ing AARON D. GARA 120
Panel Discussion: Questions and Answers
WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON
20 June 1984 WO
ROOM C
3:45 PM Optical Nonlinearltles and BistabllityElsa Garmire, Presider
WO1 Multiple quantum well nonlinearities for optical pro-cessing applications D. A. B. MILLER 120
WO2 Room-temperature excitonic optical bistability in bulkGaAs J. L. JEWELL, S. OVADIA, N. PEYGHAMBARIAN, S. S.TARNG, HYATT M. GIBBS, A. C. GOSSARD, and W. WIEG-MANN 120
WO3 Bistable optical devices by guided wave excita-tion A. KOSTER, P. MARTINOT, F. PARDO, S. LAVAL, N.PARAIRE, and M. NEVIERE 122
WO4 Reflective optical bistability at 3 mW in InAs C. D.POOLE and ELSA GARMIRE 122
WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON
20 June 1984 WP
ROOM E
3:45 PM Adaptive Optics and Atmospheric Propagation
Dennis K. Killinger, Presider
WP1 Field test experiments using pseudo-conjugationJEROME KNOPP 122
WP2 Theoretical study of pulsed thermal blooming in theatmosphere with multiline laser sources J.L.WALSH 124
WP3 Adaptive optics for compensating atmospheric distort-ions JAMES E. PEARSON 124
WP4 ArF laser system for turbulence measurements G. A.MASSEY, C. J. LEMON, M. W. MARCELLIN, and S. R. SMITH 124
WP5 Development of apparatus for automated recognitionand tracking of targets from thermal imagery, using coherentoptical data processing techniques D. G. GIBSON, M. B.BROWN, A. G. LEVENSTON, and C. STACE 124
WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON
20 June 1984 WQQ
ANAHEIM MARRIOTT HOTELSALON G
3:45 PM CLEO/IQEC Joint SymposiumFree Electron Lasers: 4
George R. Neil, Presider
WQ01 Development and applications of laboratory-scalefree-electron lasers JOHN M. J. MADEY 129
WQO2 Generation of high-intensity coherent radiation in thesoft x-ray regime J. MURPHY and C. PELLEGRINI 129
WQQ3 Media free-electron lasers M. A. PIESTRUP andA. M. FAUCHET 129
WQQ4 Far-infrared Cherenkov masers JOHN WALSH andBERNADETTE JOHNSON 129
WQQ5 Diagnostics of relativistic electron beam with lasersROBERT ROSSMANITH . 130
WEDNESDAY EVENING
20 June 1984 AWARDS
ANAHEIM HILTON AND TOWERSPACIFIC BALLROOM A/B
6:00 PM Special Awards Ceremony
Introduction
Presentation of the IEEE and OS A Fellow Certificates 130
Presentation of the IEEE Centennial Medals 130
PETER W. SMITH, Presenter
Presentation of the 1984 Elmer A. Sperry Award to FrederickAronowitz, Joseph E. Killpatrick, Warren M. Macek, andTheodore J. Podgorski 130
HERMAN STATZ, Presenter
Presentation of the 1984 David Sarnoff Award to Jameson D.Rigden and Alan D. White 130
JAMES MULLIGAN, JR., Presenter
The Conference Reception will begin at the end of the Spe-cial Awards Ceremony.
WEDNESDAY EVENING
20 June 1984 SPECIAL
ANAHEIM HILTON HOTEL AND TOWERSPACIFIC BALLROOM A/B
8:00 PM Forming Your Own Technical Company:a Special Session 130
Milton Chang, Moderator
THURSDAY MORNING
21 June 1984 THA
ROOM A
8:15 AM Industrial Sensors
James H. Bechtel, Presider
THAI Optical fiber chemical sensor M. A. BUTLER 132
THA2 New detection scheme in a fiber-optic magnetic-fieldsensor free from ambiguity caused by material magnetic hyst-eresis K. P. KOO and GEORGE H. SIGEL, JR. 132
THA3 Fiber-optic sensor systems for industrial monitoringapplications GEORGE KYCHAKOFF, PHILLIP H. PAUL, andRONALD K.HANSON 132
THA4 Pulsed infrared radiometry for remote monitoring ofthermal properties or thickness of thin film A. C. TAM andW. P. LEUNG 132
THA5 Remote measurement of strain or temperature usinga monomode fiber polarimetric sensor A. D. KERSEY,M. CORKE, and D. A. JACKSON 134
THA6 Active interferometer using a laser diode T. YOSHI-NO and M. NARA 134
THURSDAY MORNING
21 June 1984 THB
ROOM B
8:15 AM Advanced Fusion Lasers and Materials: 1
William F. Krupke, Presider
THB1 Recent advances in KrF systems technologySIDNEY SINGER 136
THB2 850-J 150-nsec narrowband krypton fluoride las-er J. GOLDHAR, K. S. JANCAITIS, JOHN R. MURRAY, and L.G. SCHLITT 136
THB3 Damage-resistant porous silica antireflection coat-ings for use at 351, 266, and 248 nm DAVID MILAM, W. H.LOWDERMILK, J. G. WILDER, IAN M. THOMAS, and B. E.YOLDAS 136
THB4 Measurement of two-photon-induced solarization inBK3, BK7, and BK10 at 532 nm W. T. WHITE, M. A.HENESIAN, and M. J. WEBER 138
THB5 Antireflection coating for KDP crystals IAN M.THOMAS 138
THURSDAY MORNING
21 June 1984 THC
ROOM C
8:15 AM Short Wavelengths from Solid-State Lasers
Steve Guch, Jr., Presider
THC1 Material and medical applications using a 20-W fre-quency-doubled Nd:YAG laser T. S. FAHLEN and P.PERKINS 138y
THC2 High-average-power laser using intracavity soundsecond harmonic generation: theory and experiment YUNGS. LIU 140
THC3 Picosecond UV by THG using a mode-locked Q-switched Nd:YAG laser K. C. LIU, G. VAILLANCOURT, andMARTIN G. COHEN 140
THC4 E-beam end-pumped ZnSe laser at 300 KS. COLAK, A. HEBLING, B. FITZPATRICK, and R. BHARGAVA
140
THC5 Mg:LiNbO3-efficient intracavity frequency doubler foracoustooptic (^switched Nd:YAG lasers HUIFA WU, HUIDEXU, BING XIAO, LIANGYING XU, and HAORAN TAN 142
THC6 Optimum parameters of a high-conversion efficiencyintracavity frequency-doubled laser with Gaussianlike beamJIANQUAN YAO and BIN XUE 142
THURSDAY MORNING
21 June 1984 THD
ROOM E
8:15 AM Diagnostics of Microelectronics Processing and Mate-rials
M. Hanabusa, Presider
THD1 Direct observation of SiH2 in glow discharges by fre-quency-modulation absorption spectroscopy J. M. JASIN-SKI, R. W. DREYFUS, R. D. ESTES, R. E. WALKUP, E. A.WHITTAKER, and GARY C. BJORKLUND 142
THD2 Detection of oxygen concentration in silicon wafersusing a tunable diode laser W. LO and R. F. MAJKOWSKI 142
THD3 Morphological changes induced by 1-jtm psec irradia-tion of crystalline silicon IAN W. BOYD, THOMAS F.BOGGESS, STEVEN C. MOSS, and ARTHUR L. SMIRL 144
THD4 Thermal radiation from laser heated silicon and pyro-metric temperature M. KEMMLER, G. WARTMANN, and D.VONDERLINDE 144
THD5 Semiconductor surface structure probing by secondharmonic and sum frequency generation in reflection S. A.AKHMANOV, M. F. GALJAUTDINOV, N. I. KOROTEEV, G. A.PAITIAN, I. L. SHUMAY, and A. A. SUMBATOV 144
THURSDAY MORNING
21 June 1984 THE
ROOM A
10:30 AM Material Processing
Marshall G. Jones, Presider
THE 1 Laser surface treatment of H13 tool steel JAMES T.LUXON, CHARLES V. WHITE, and LYNNEA ZYNDA 146
THE2 Laser magnetic domain refinement GARY L.NEIHEISEL and JERRY W. SCHOEN 146
THE3 High-speed cinematography of laser spotwelding G. J. A. M. NOTENBOOM 146
THE4 Effects of laser-cutting selected properties of Inconel718 LINDA B. ROSECRANS 146
THE5 Lasers in material processing: report on the ItalianFive-Year Project on High Power Lasers A. SONA 148
THURSDAY MORNING
21 June 1984 THF
ROOM B
10:30 AM Advanced Fusion Lasers and Materials: 2
Sidney Singer, Presider
THF1 Flashlamp pumping of Nd:glass L. P. BRADLEY, K.S. JANCAITIS, D. A. MASQUELIER, C. E. THOMPSON, and H.T. POWELL 148
THF2 Silicone rubber edge claddings for laser disk ampli-fiers J. E. MURRAY, M. O. RILEY, R. J. POLI, and H. T. POW-ELL 148
THF3 Potential of solid-state lasers for high-average-powerapplications JOHN L. EMMETT, WILLIAM F. KRUPKE, andJOHN B. TRENHOLME 150
THF4 Large aperture electrooptical switch J. GOLDHARand M. A. HENESIAN 150
THF5 Spontaneous and stimulated Raman scattering mea-surements in KDP crystal segments and benzene W. L.SMITH, F. P. MILANOVICH, and M. A. HENESIAN 150
THURSDAY MORNING
21 June 1984 THG
ROOM C
10:30 AM Excimer Lasers and Applications
Robert C. Sze, Presider
THG1 93-nm multiphoton pumped XUV laser H. EGGER,H. PUMMER, T. S. LUK, K. BOYER, and C. K. RHODES 152
THG2 High-power rare-gas halide laser system for shortpulse amplification SHUNTARO WATANABE, AKIRAENDOH, and MASAYOSHI WATANABE 152
THG3 Efficiency optimization for an electron-beam-pumpedhigh-power ArF excimer laser AKIRA SUDA, MINORUOBARA, and TOMOO FUJIOKA 152
THG4 Recent improvements of the broadband XeF (C -» A)laser in the blue-green spectral region Y. NACHSHON, N. Nl-SHIDA, FRANK K. TITTEL, W. L. WILSON, JR., W. L. NIGHAN,and G. MAROWSKY 154
THG5 NaHg revisited: new prospects for a red excimerlaser (680-1000 nm) J. P. WOERDMAN, J. SCHLEHJEN, J. J.DE GROOT, and Q. H. F. VREHEN 154
THG6 High-repetition-rate pulsed gas lasers V. YU. BAR-ANOV and D. D. MALYUTA 154
THURSDAY MORNING
21 June 1984 THH
ROOM E
10:30 AM Laser-Induced Deposition of Semiconductors andMetals
Thomas F. Deutsch, Presider
THH1 Photo-assisted CVD of Si film using a CO2 laser M.HANABUSA, H. KIKUCHI, and T. IWANAGA 156
THH2 Laser photochemical and photothermal gas-phase de-position of gold F. A. HOULE, CAROL R. JONES, THOMAS H.BAUM, and CAROL A. KOVAC 156
THH3 Laser-jet electrodeposition of gold and copper R. J.VON GUTFELD, M. H. GELCHINSKI, D. R. VIGLIOTTI, and L. T.ROMANKIW 156
THH4 Electrical properties of photodeposited metallines H. H. GILGEN and R. M. OSGOOD, JR. 158
THH5 Laser metallization of solar cells SUBHADRADUTTA, P. G. McMULLIN, P. RAI-CHOUDHURY, and BRIAN D.GALLAGHER 158
THURSDAY AFTERNOON
21 June 1984 THI
SOUTHWEST EXHIBIT HALL
12:00 NOON Poster Session: 2
THI1 Self-referencing holograms RICHARD ANDERSON 158
THI2 Resonance ionization spectroscopy for detection oftropospheric NO DAVID M. RIDER, I. STUART McDERMID,THOMAS J. PACALA, and JAMES B. LAUDENSLAGER 158
THI3 Design of a CO2 laser preamplifier for improved lidarand rangef inder sensitivity EDWARD J. McLELLAN, ROBERTFISHER, and JACK L. BUFTON 160
THI4 Lidar applications to the geochemical field W.CORIO, S. DRAGHI, A. FERRARIO, and E. ZANZOTTERA 160
THI5 Adaptive optic modal control JEAN-PAUL GAFFARD,CLAUDE TOURAUT, and JEAN-CLAUDE DE MISCAULT 160
THI6 Range-sensitivity optimization of range-resolved dif-ferential absorption lidars W. STAEHR, W. LAHMANN, C.WEITKAMP, and W. MICHAELIS 162
THI7 Inspection of optical surfaces using a pulsed laser andvideo microimaging system C. D. MARRS, J. O. PORTEUS,and J. R. PALMER 162
THI8 High-speed drilling by YAG laser YUXI CHEN andWEIZHONG CHANG 162
THI9 Laser-excited fluorescence microscope system withultrahigh sensitivity and spatial resolution for single biologicalcells SHUNICHI SATO, SUSUMU KIKUCHI, HIROMASA ITO,HUMIO INABA, YOSHIO TAGUCHI, and MORIO KASAI 162
THI10 Optical emission spectra from excitation of smallaerosols by excimer laser photons L. C. LEE and MASAKOSUTO 164
TH111 Real-time optical spectrum analyzer M. A. MURIEL 164
TH112 Single crystal optical fibers: growth andapplications M. M. FEJER, J. L. NIGHTINGALE, G. A. MAGEL,T. Y. FAN, W. KOZLOVSKII, and ROBERT L. BEYER 164
THI13 Infrared lasers in radiation dosimetry V. K.MATHUR, M. D. BROWN, P. BRAUNLICH, and J. GASIOT 164
THI14 Image processing by coded apertures in scanningmicroscopy with uniform and Gaussian laser illuminationA. CHOUDHURY and U. PURKAYASTHA 166
THI15 Growth of specially doped YAG laser crystal and itsmultifunction properties YOUXI GUI, GUANGTAO YAO,TIANLA Jl, YEUYING GU, XIANGHENG LO, and LANMINZHANG 166
THI16 Self-detecting light-emitting-diode proximity sensorMARK JOHNSON 166
TH117 Effect of spot overlapping on pulsed-laser metal cut-ting C. S. LEE, ANURAG GOEL, and HIDENORI OSADA 166
THUS Direct measurements of vibration to rotation popula-tion transfer in HF J. J. HINCHEN and R. H. HOBBS 168
THI19 Laser enrichment of carbon-14 L. MANNIK and S.K. BROWN 168/
THI20 Observation of quasi-bound near-dissociation energylevels in the 61 IIu-state of Na2 by modulated gain spectros-copy H. J. VEDDER, G. K. CHAWLA, and R. W. FIELD 168
THI21 Multiphoton dissociation experiments in capillarywaveguide cells JAMES A. O'NEILL 168
THI22 Use of correlation technique in Raman carbohydrateassays A. R. B. DE CASTRO and J. G. R. S. FRANCO 170
THI23 Microscopic model for the ablative photodecomposi-tion of polymers by far-ultraviolet radiation (193 nm)BARBARA J. GARRISON and R. SRINIVASAN 170
THI24 Chemical dynamics of the ablative photodecomposi-tion of polymers by far-ultraviolet (193-nm) laser radiation R.SRINIVASAN 170
THI25 Application of pulsed laser processing in the fabrica-tion of Ge nuclear radiation detectors D. H. LOWNDES andT. W. RAUDORF 170
THI26 CO2 laser annealed ion-implanted silicon photodiodewith high blue-light sensitivity J. P. JIANG, B. Y. SUN, Y. L.LIU, W. N. LI, and Z. M. WANG 172
THI27 Experimental and theoretical studies in the time evo-lution of laser chemical vapor deposition S. D. ALLEN, J.GOLDSTONE, R. Y. JAN, S. VERNON, and J. UNG 172
THI28 Development of a diagnostic for heavy impurities inneutral beams by laser-induced fluorescence C. F. BUR-RELL, A. S. SCHLACHTER, and R. V. PYLE 172
THI29 Limit on beam healing by phase conjugation Y. B.BAND, D. F. HELLER, and 0. KAFRI 172
THI30 Nonlinear optics of the hybrid nematic cellF. SIMONI, G. BARBERO, and P. AIELLO 174
THI31 Blue-light generation with AlxGa1-xAs or dye lasersand KNbO3 crystals J.-C. BAUMERT, P. GUNTER, and J.HOFFNAGLE 174
THI32 One-way viewing through photorefractive KNbO3
P. GUNTER and M. Z. ZHA 174
THI33 Second and third harmonic generation in opticalfibers J.-M. GABRIAGUES and L. FERSING 176
THI34 Influence of laser phase noise on a single-frequencysemiconductor laser system PHILIPPE GALLION and GUYDEBARGE 176
THI35 Local data network based on atmospheric and opticalfiber transmission F. J. LOPEZ, P. G. GUTIERREZ, R.BELTRAN, A. G. MARCOS, and E. ROBLES 176
THI36 Multiple waveguide lens H. A. HAUS, L. MOLTER-ORR, and F. J. LEONBERGER 176
THI37 Dynamic characteristics of single-mode coupled-cav-ity semiconductor lasers GOVIND P. AGRAWAL 178
THI38 Direct measurement of the frequency modulationcharacteristics of a coupled-cavity laser AASUMUND SV.SUDBO 178
THI39 Hg^xCdxTe nonlinear Fabry-Perot filters for opticallimiting at 10.6 /urn Y. K. PARK 178
THI40 Electrooptical effect in cholesteric blue phases withnegative dielectric anisotropy B. M. LEON-FONG, G.HEPPKE, and J. A. MARTIN-PEREDA 180
THI41 Progress in frequency domain optical storage F. M.SCHELLENBERG, W. E. MOERNER, M. D. LEVENSON, GARYC. BJORKLUND, and D. J. BERNAYS 180
THI42 Dynamics of solid-state plasma in optically controlledmillimeter-wave devices AILEEN M. VAUCHER, M. G. LI, C.D. STRIFFLER, and CHI H. LEE 182
THI43 Amplified tunable short cavity dye laserH. P. KORTZ, G. W. SCOTT, A. J. COX, D. M. GUTHALS, H.NATHEL, S. W. YEH, S. P. WEBB, and J. H. CLARK 182
THI44 Gain bandwidth transform-limited pulses from an ac-tive-passive mode-locked Nd:YAG laser H. NATHEL, D. M.-GUTHALS, and J. H. CLARK 182
THURSDAY AFTERNOON
21 June 1984 THJ
ROOM A
1:30 PM Optical Switching and Logic
Hyatt M. Gibbs, Presider
THJ1 All-optical switching and logic: potential and limita-tions PETER W. SMITH 184
THJ2 Single-etalon optical logic gates J. L. JEWELL, M. C.RUSHFORD, HYATT M. GIBBS, and N. PEYGHAMBARIAN 184
THJ3 Bistable laser-diode memory for optical time-divisionswitching applications Y. ODAGIRI, K. KOMATSU, and S.SUZUKI 184
THJ4 Performance of laser-diode optical switchesMASAHIROIKEDA 186
THJ5 Optical switching and modulation with gain in aGaAIAs diode J. HEGARTY and K. A. JACKSON 186
THURSDAY AFTERNOON
21 June 1984 THK
ROOM B
1:30 PM Laser-Assisted Etching of Microelectronic Materials
R. J. von Gutfeld, Presider
THK1 Laser-assisted etching of conducting and semicon-ducting materials T. J. CHUANG 186
THK2 Holographic photoelectrochemical etching of diffrac-tion gratings in n-lnP and n-GalnAsP for DFB lasers R. M.LUM, A. M. GLASS, A. A. BALLMAN, F. W. OSTERMAYER,JR., P. A. KOHL, and R. A. LOGAN 186
THK3 Microetching of GaAs with UV light in aqueous solu-tions H. H. GILGEN, D. V. PODLESNIK, and R. M. OSGOOD,JR. 188
THK4 Excimer laser etching of polymeric films P. E. DYERandJ. SIDHU 188
THK5 Calorimetric and acoustic study of far-UV laser abla-tion of polymers G. GORODETSKY, T. G. KAZYAKA, R. L.MELCHER, and R. SRINIVASAN 188
THURSDAY AFTERNOON
21 June 1984 THL
ROOM C
1:30 PM CO2 Lasers: Waveguide and High-Power
Ralph R. Jacobs, Presider
THL1 High-pressure cw rf-excited CO2 waveguide laser S.LANDRO and G. WANG 190
THL2 Radio-frequency-excited metal waveguide laserJONATHAN G. GROSSMAN, LEE W. CASPERSON, andOSCAR M. STAFSUDD 190
THL3 Discharge scaling in rf-excited waveguide C0 2 las-ers C. J. BAKER, D. HE, P. J. WILSON, and D. R. HALL 190
THL4 Mode control and frequency tunability in rf-excitedCO2 waveguide lasers C. A. HILL, P. MONK, and D. R. HALL 192
THL5 High-power injection-locked CO2 ring waveguide os-cillator-amplifier P. COTTIN, JEAN-LUC BOULNOIS, and A.VANLERBERGHE 192
THL6 Transverse flow cw 5-kW CO2 laser V. FANTINI, G.INCERTI, F. PANDARESE, and L. GARIFO 192
THURSDAY AFTERNOON
21 June 1984 THM
ROOM E
1:30 PM Phase Conjugation: 1
Jean Pierre Huignard, Presider
THM1 Side-arm phase-conjugated laser resonator S.CHANDRA, R. C. FUKUDA, R. UTANO, and J. L. PAUL 194
THM2 Phase conjugation in InSb with cw CO lasers H. A.ALATTAR, D. HAGAN, H. A. MACKENZE, and C. T. SEATON 194
THM3 Four-wave mixing In semi-insulating lnP:Fe and GaAs:Crat 1.06 /urn using the pbotorefractive effect A. M. GLASS, A. M.JOHNSON, D. H. OLSON, W. M. SIMPSON, and A. A. BALLMAN 194
THM4 Assessment of the performance limits of real-timecorrelation R. JAURA, P. FOOTE, L. CONNORS, and T. J.HALL 196
THURSDAY AFTERNOON
21 June 1984 THN
ROOM A
3:45 PM Guided-Wave Optical Signal Processing
Fred J. Leonberger, Presider
THN1 High-speed optical waveguide switches ROD C.ALFERNESS 196
THN2 4-bit 1-Gsample/sec electrooptic guided-waveanalog-to-digital converter R. A. BECKER, C. E.WOODWARD, L. M. JOHNSON, and F. J. LEONBERGER 196
THN3 Measurement and/or processing of optical wavefronts using integrated guided-wave optics R. H. REDIKER,T. A. LIND, and B. E. BURKE 196
THN4 Fiber-optic lattice filtering B. MOSLEHI, M. TUR,JOSEPH W. GOODMAN, and H. J. SHAW 198
THN5 Coherent optical fiber transversal filter D. E. N.DA VIES 198
THURSDAY AFTERNOON
21 June 1984 THO
ROOM B
3:45 PM Symposium on Laser Applications in Semiconductor-Device Fabrication
Gregory L. Olson, Presider
THO1 Laser direct writing: a capsule review of methodsand applications in microelectronics D. J. EHRLICH and J. Y.TSAO 200
THO2 Optical analysis of device materials: structures andprocessing S. R. J. BRUECK 200
TH03 Wafer-scale laser pantography 7: Advances in laserfabrication of integrated circuits IRVING P. HERMAN,BRUCE M. McWILLIAMS, FRED MITLITSKY, and DOUGLAS S.PETERS 200
THO4 Automatic measurement and inspection applicationsof lasers in microelectronics ALEX FLAMHOLZ 200
THURSDAY AFTERNOON
21 June 1984 THP
ROOM C
3:45 PM Long-Pulsed XeCI Lasers
Eddy A. Stappaerts, Presider
THP1 Magnetically switched 150-W XeCI laser R. R.BUTCHER and THEODORE S. FAHLEN 202
THP2 Demonstration of high efficiency in a discharge-pumped XeCI laser W. H. LONG, JR., M. J. PLUMMER, andEDDY A. STAPPAERTS 202
THP3 Magnetically induced pulser-sustainer laser excita-tion R. S. TAYLOR and K. E. LEOPOLD 202
THP4 Improvement in efficiency of x-ray preionized XeCIlasers M. R. OSBORNE, M. H. R. HUTCHINSON, and PETERW. SMITH 204
THP5 Magnetically switched long-pulse XeCI oscillator-amplifier system THOMAS J. PACALA, I. STUART McDER-MID, and JAMES B. LAUDENSLAGER 204
THP6 Prism-tuning characteristics of a long-pulsed XeCIlaser ROBERT C. SZE 204
THURSDAY AFTERNOON
21 June 1984 THQ
ROOM E
3:45 PM Phase Conjugation: 2
Richard C. Lind, Presider
THQ1 Optical turbulence in a phase conjugate resonatorGILMORE J. DUNNING and GEORGE C. VALLEY 206
THQ2 Phase-gradient contrast using barium titanate opticalphase conjugators PHILIP S. BRODY 206
THQ3 Phase conjugation in photorefractive materi-als JACK FEINBERG and STEPHEN DUCHARME 206
THQ4 Two-wave mixing in photorefractive BSO crystals:energy transfer and applications JEAN PIERRE HUIGNARD,H. RAJBENBACH, and B. LOISEAUX 206
THQ5 Mode theory and fidelity of Kerr-type phase conjugatemirrors ERIK J. BOCHOVE 208
THURSDAY EVENING
21 June 1984 THR
ROOM B
8:00 PM Postdeadline Papers
Gary C. BJorklund and E. David Hinkley, Presiders
Titles will be announced and summaries will be made avail-able at the meeting. 208
FRIDAY MORNING
22 June 1984 FA
ROOM A
8:15 AM Single-Mode Diode Lasers
James Walpole, Presider
FA1 Lasing characteristics of '\.5-[im InGaAsP/lnP buriedheterostructure distributed feedback laser SHINZOH SUZA-Kl, TSUTOMU WATANABE, HIROHIKO KATSUDA, KOUICHITAKAHASHI, TAKASHI NOMURA, TOHRU SIMMEN, and HIR-OSHIOSANAI 210
FA2 Temporal and spectral characteristics of single-longitu-dinal-mode short-coupled-cavity InGaAsP lasers under multigi-gahertz modulation CHINLON LIN, C. A. BURRUS, G. EISEN-STEIN, R. S. TUCKER, P. BESOMI, and R. J. NELSON 210
FA3 Effect of external optical feedback on the spectralproperties of cleaved-coupled-cavity semiconductor las-er N. A. OLSSON and N. K. DUTTA 210
FA4 Power dropout statistics of nearly single-longitudinal-mode semiconductor laser G. L. ABBAS and T. K. YEE 212
FA5 Coherent operation of four GaAIAs lasers by injectionlocking L. GOLDBERG, H. F. TAYLOR, and J. F. WELLER 212
FA6 Parallel-coupled waveguide semiconductor lasers S.MUKAI, E. KAPON, J. KATZ, C. LINDSEY, Z. RAV-NOY, S.MARGALIT, and AMNON YARIV 212
FRIDAY MORNING
22 June 1984 FB
ROOM B
8:15 AM Special CLEO/IQEC Symposium on Phototherapy ofCancer: 1
M. W. Berns, Presider
FB1 Photodynamic therapy for the treatment of cancerTHOMAS J. DOUGHERTY 214
FB2 In vitro and in vivo studies of the mechanism of porphy-rin-induced photodamage of malignant cells G. JORI, E.REDDI, I. COZZANI, L. TOMIO, and G. MANDOLITI 214
FB3 Cancer treatment with laser irradiation and tumor-seek-ing photosensitizers LARS O. SVAASAND 214
FB4 Two-step laser photobiology: application to cancertreatment A. ANDREONI, R. CUBEDDU, and 0. SVELTO 216
FB5 Mechanisms of the hematoporphyrin-derivative(HpD)-induced photodamage of neoplastic cells: fluorescencestudies G. BOTTIROLI, I. FREITAS, F. DOCCHIO, R. RAMPO-Nl, and C. A. SACCHI 216
FB6 Integral photoradiotherapy of bladder cancer D.JOCHAM, R. DIETRICH, W. WEINSHEIMER, U. LOHRS, andE. UNSOLD 216
FRIDAY MORNING
22 June 1984 FC
ROOM C
8:15 AM Metal Vapor and Iodine Lasers
J. G. Eden, Presider
FC1 Discharge-excited Sr+ and Ca+ recombination las-ers J. A. PIPER and M. S. BUTLER 218
FC2 New room-temperature pulsed metal vapor laser N.D. PERRY and R. C. TOBIN 218
FC3 Index-of-refraction fluctuations in a photodissociationiodine laser J. DOUGLAS BEASON, W. W. CHOW, and M.ALME 218
FC4 Long gain length iodine solar-pumped laser RUSSELLJ. DEYOUNG 218
FC5 Efficient long-pulse operation of an iodine monobrom-ide laser LUIS E. ZAPATA and RUSSELL J. DEYOUNG 220
FRIDAY MORNING
22 June 1984 FD
ROOM D
8:15 AM Laser Applications In Lithography, Doping, and Intercon-nections
Kanti Jain, Presider
FD1 Photolithography with VUV lasers J. C. WHITE, H. G.CRAIGHEAD, R. E. HOWARD, L D. JACKEL, and O. R. WOOD 220
FD2 Pulsed excimer and CO2 laser processing for fabrication ofZnO and SiC devices D. H. LOWNDES, F. A. MODINE, E.SONDER, Y. CHEN, and W. J. CHOYKE 220
FD3 Interconnection and testing of a wafer-scale circuit withlaser processing G. H. CHAPMAN, A. H. ANDERSON, K. H.KONKLE, B. MATHUR, J. I. RAFFEL, and A. M. SOARES 222
FD4 Zn doping of GaAs from the gas phase by laser-induceddiffusion P. ROENTGEN, H. KRAUTLE, W. ROTH, and H.BENEKING 222
FD5 Gas-phase photochemical doping of amorphous sili-con R. BILENCHI, A. FERRARIO, and M. MUSCI 222
FD6 Importance of photoinduced surface heating for filmquality improvement in excimer laser-induced metal CVDH. YOKOYAMA, FUMIHIKO UESUGI, SHUNJI KISHIDA, andKUNIHIKO WASHIO 222
FRIDAY MORNING
22 June 1984 FE
ROOM E
8:15 AM New Nonlinear Sources
Peter Esherick, Presider
FE1 Anti-Stokes Raman laser investigations B. WELLEGE-HAUSEN, K. LUDEWIGT, and H. WELLING 224
FE2 Short-pulse generation with an intracavity Raman oscil-lator F. PRADRE and R. FREY 224
FE3 Broadly tunable VUV radiation generated by frequencymixing in gases. R. HILBIG, G. HILBER, A. TIMMERMANN,and R. WALLENSTEIN 226
FE4 Continuous-wave sum-frequency generation near 243nm using two intersecting enhancement cavities B. COUIL-LAUD, S. G. MACLEAN, and T. W. HANSCH 226
FES Generation of subnanosecond 308-nm pulses by trun-cated stimulated Brillouin scattering O. L. BOURNE and A.JOHN ALCOCK 226
FRIDAY MORNING
22 June 1984 FF
ROOM A
10:30 AM Diode Lasers and Other Devices
Thomas G. Glallorenzi, Presider
FF1 High-speed switching transients in directly modulatedInGaAsP lasers RODNEY S. TUCKER and IVAN P.KAMINOW 228
FF2 Limitation to high-bit-rate modulation of semiconductorlasers caused by dynamic changes of Fermi level and opticalloss S. J. CHUA and T. C. CHONG 228
FF3 Novel laser modulation method suitable for data bursttransmission M. NAKAMURA, K. KAITO, and T. OZEKI 228
FF4 Tunable Ti:LiNbO3 waveguide filter for long wavelength(X = .1.3-1.6-pm) multiplexing/demultiplexing ROD C.ALFERNESS and J. J. VESELKA 230
FFS Lasing characteristics of semiconductor laser arrays in-corporating separate contacts E. KAPON, C. LINDSEY, S.MARGALIT, AMNON YARIV, and J. KATZ 230
FF6 Super-mode theory of phase-locked semiconductorlaser arrays E. KAPON, AMNON YARIV, and J. KATZ 230
FF7 External feedback effects on the dynamic behavior ofFabry-Perot and DFB diode lasers ROY LANG 232
FRIDAY MORNING
22 June 1984 FG
ROOM B
10:30 AM Special CLEO/KMEC Symposium on Phototherapy ofCancer: 2
Thomas J. Dougherty, Presider
FG1 Light delivery systems and dosimetry in photodynamlctherapy DANIEL R. DOIRON, CHARLES J. GOMER,STANLEY W. FOUNTAIN, NICHOLAS J. RAZUM, and A. LINNMURPHREE 232
FG2 Treatment of intraocular tumors with hematoporphyrinderivative photoradlatlon therapy CHARLES J. GOMER, A.LINN MURPHREE, DANIEL R. DOIRON, NICHOLAS J. RAZUM,and STANLEY W. FOUNTAIN 232
FG3 Contrast enhancement in tumor localization usinghematoporphyrin derivative laser-induced fluorescence J.ANKERST, K. SVANBERG, S. MONTAN, and S. SVANBERG 234
FG4 Laser-excited fluorescence for diagnosis of cancerA. E. PROFIO, SARNAIK, and L. R. WUDL 234
FG5 Photophysical properties of Photofrin II in different sol-vents A. ANDREONI and R. CUBEDDU 234
FG6 Lasers in cell biology and genetics M. W. BERNS 234
FRIDAY MORNING
22 June 1984 FH
ROOM C
10:30 AM Metal HalkJe and CO2 Lasers
John R. Murray, Presider
FH1 Multidimensional modeling of HgBr electric dischargelasers M. J. KUSHNER, A. L. PINDROH, C. H. FISHER, T. A.ZNOTINS, and J. J. EWING 236
FH2 Recombination processes in discharge-excited mercu-ry bromide lasers H. J. BAKER and N. SEDDON 236
FH3 How to make a long-lived practical HgBr laser C. S.LIU and I. LIBERMAN 236
FH4 Tunable injection-locked cadmium monoiodide las-er D. P. GREENE and J. G. EDEN 236
FHS Perspectives on cw electron-beam stabilized electric-discharge CO2 laser development V. A. KATULIN, A. P.ZAIKIN, V. I. IGOSHIN, and N. L. KUPRIYANOV 238
FH6 Laser beam quality from continuously coupled unstableresonators in the presence of LIMP E. K. GORTON, P. J.GORTON, and E. W. PARCELL 238
FRIDAY MORNING
22 June 1984 Fl
ROOM D
10:30 AM Materials and Devices for Optical Signal Processing
Armand R. Tanguay, Jr., Presider
FI1 Acoustooptic diffraction in a spherical waveguide andapplications in rf signal processing C. S. TSAI, Q. LI, C. C.LEE, and S. SOTTINI 238
FI2 Continuous Fourier transforms obtained with a Braggcell signal processor DAVID F. HOTZ 240
FI3 Silicon electrooptic spatial light modulator WALTERY. MOK, T. J. KARR, and W. ANDERSON 240
FI4 Edge enhancement effects for real-time optical proc-essing M. W. McCALL, L. C. LAYCOCK, and C. R. PETTS 240
FI5 Wavelength-dependent rotatory power of 90° twistednematic liquid crystal SHIN-TSON WU, U. EFRON, J.GRINBERG, and LA VERNE D. HESS 240
FRIDAY MORNING
22 June 1984 FJ
ROOM E
10:30 AM New Spectroscopic Methods
S. R. J. Brueck, Presider
FJ1 Electrooptic phase-sensitive detection of optical emis-sion and scattering: methods and applications A. Z.GENACK 242
FJ2 Zero-background detection of persistent spectral holesusing ultrasonic modulation A. L. HUSTON and W. E.MOERNER 242
FJ3 Novel optical method for real-time ultrasonic absorptionspectroscopy A. C. TAM and W. P. LEUNG 242
FJ4 Two-photon absorption detected by thermal diffrac-tion DANIEL J. McGRAW and JOEL M. HARRIS 244
FJ5 Use of laser-induced fluorescence techniques in theanalysis of ultratrace levels of uranium CHI-KE CHENG, ZHI-LIN WANG, FU-XING TAN, XIA-NIAN LIU, XUN-XI PAN, andCHENG-FA ZHENG 244
FRIDAY AFTERNOON
22 June 1984 FK
ROOM A
1:30 PM Laser Fusion Technology: 1
John M. Soures, Presider
FK1 Review of the Antares laser fusion facility CHARLESF. MANSFIELD 244
FK2 Performance characterization of the Omega short-wavelength laser facility W. BEICH, M. DUNN, R. HUTCHI-SON, L. IWAN, S. JACOBS, L. LUND, R. PECK, D. QUICK, M.C. RICHARDSON, F. RISTER, and JOHN M. SOURES 244
FK3 Irradiation uniformity with the multiple-beam UV irradia-tion facility M. C. RICHARDSON, S. SKUPSKY, JOHN M.SOURES, W. LAMPETER, S. TOMER, R. HUTCHISON, M.DUNN, and W. BEICH 246
FK4 System to measure the output energy of a frequency-tripled Nd:glass laser L. IWAN, D. QUICK, W. SEKA, and K.WALSH 246
FK5 Holographic recording of a pulsed high-power laserTERRANCE J. KESSLER and JAMES M. FORSYTH 246
FRIDAY AFTERNOON
22 June 1984 FL
ROOM B
1:30 PM Laser Applications In Surgery and Medicine
O. Svelto, Presider
FL1 Ultraviolet-laser ablation of skin and other tissue R. J.LANE, R. LINSKER, J. J. WYNNE, A. TORRES, and R. G. GER-ONEMUS 248
FL2 Effect of excimer laser irradiation on human atheroscle-rotic aorta: amelioration of laser-induced thermal dam-age WARREN S. GRUNDFEST. I. FRANK LITVACK, LEONMORGENSTERN, JAMES S. FORRESTER, I. STUART McDER-MID, THOMAS J. PACALA, DAVID M. RIDER, and JAMES B.LAUDENSLAGER 248
FL3 High-power laser beam transmitted through a fiber-optic cable for treatment of human hepatic cancer BIQINGYE and ZHONGLIN MA 248
FL4 Dye-enhanced laser photocoagulation of the eye CAR-MEN A. PULIAFITO, R. ROX ANDERSON, E. S. GRAGOUDAS,and ROGER F. STEINERT 250
FL5 Laser microsurgical repair of soft tissue: a demonstra-tion of surgical techniques DOUGLAS K. DEW 250
FL6 Laser coronary recanalization in human patients D. S.J. CHOY, S. STERTZER, R. MYLER, J. MARCO, and G. FOUR-NIAL 250
FL7 Optical fiber used in laser acupuncture for cancer painrelief V. N. ZALESSKY and G. V. FROLOV 250
FRIDAY AFTERNOON
22 June 1984 FM
ROOM C
1:30 PM Infrared Gas Lasers
D. R. Hall, Presider
FM1 Frequency synthesized and continuously tunable 9-11-Mm IR laser sources P. K. CHEO 252
FM2 Continuous-wave 12.08-/im NH3 Raman laser emis-sion with 22% power conversion efficiency J.-M. LOUR-TIOZ, P. WAZEN, and T. A. DE TEMPLE 252
FM3 CO2 laser using electrochemical transformation of or-ganic compounds KATSUMI MIDORIKAWA, HIDEO TASHI-RO, and SUSUMU NAMBA 252
FM4 Closed-cycle self-sustained discharge-excited cw COlaser SHUN-CHI SATO, TAKAO ABE, and TOMOO FUJIOKA 252
FMS High-power line-tunable oscillation of optically pumped cwNH3 lasers C. ROLLAND, J. RED, and BRIAN K. GARSIDE 254
FM6 Wide-range amplification of a tunable diode laser usingan optically pumped high-pressure NH3 gas TOSHIROKOIZUMI, HIDEO TASHIRO, KOICHI TOYODA, andSUSUMU NAMBA 254
FRIDAY AFTERNOON
22 June 1984 FN
ROOM D
1:30 PM Laser Chemical Physics: 2
Allen Hartford, Presider
FN1 Industrial applications of laser-induced chemistry J.WOLFRUM 254
FN2 Excimer and dye laser-induced photochemistry ofCH3TeTeCH3 and CH3TeCH3 monitored by time-of-flight lasermultiphoton ionization spectroscopy M. STUKE 254
FN3 Infrared multiphoton excitation of deuterated dode-canes: final product and photoionization mass spectroscopicsite selectivity studies C. E. GEOSLING, T. J. MANUCCIA, J.LAUKAMPER, A. MACROBERT, D. FELDMANN, and K. WELGE 256
FN4 Infrared multiphoton dissociation of SO2 T. B. SIMPSONand N. BLOEMBERGEN 256
FN5 Application of holography in photochemical hole-burning F. A. BURKHALTER, A. J. MEIXNER, A. RENN, andU. P. WILD 256
FRIDAY AFTERNOON
22 June 1984 FO
ROOM E
1:30 PM Nonlinear Optics: 1
Burt C. Johnson, Presider
FO1 Growth and assessment of highly nonlinear organic ma-terials B. K. NAYAR, D. R. SMITH, C. S. YOON, and J. N.SHERWOOD 258
. FO2 Nonlinear birefringence of liquid crystals at 10.59tim SHIN-TSON WU and LA VERNE D. HESS 258
FO3 Nonlinear optics in semiconductors and applications tobistable switches, logic gates, and other optical circuit elem-ents S. D. SMITH 258FO4 New organic molecular materials for nonlinearoptics J. ZYSS and J. L. OUDAR 260
FRIDAY AFTERNOON
22 June 1984 FP
ROOM A
3:30 PM Laser Fusion Technology: 2
George E. Busch, Presider
FP1 Gekko XII system for laser fusion research C.YAMANAKA, Y. KATO, T. MOCHIZUKI, M. NAKATSUKA, T.YAMANAKA, K. YOSHIDA, and SADAO NAKAI 260
FP2 Mechanical design and performance of 74-cm aperturethird harmonic crystal arrays BURT C. JOHNSON, J. D. WIL-LIAMS, M. A. SUMMERS, DAVID MILAM, and R. C. MURRAY 260
FP3 Phase match orientation of crystals for frequency inver-sion arrays R. G. OZARSKI, R. E. HUGENBERGER, BURT C.JOHNSON, W. A. JONES, S. WARSHAW, and K. R.BRADLEY 262
FP4 Pulse shaping in dispersive transmission lines J. F.WHITAKER, T. NORRIS, and GERARD A. MOUROU 262
FP5 Development of a high-power laser system for laser fu-sion research in China XIMING DENG and WENYAN YU 262
FRIDAY AFTERNOON
22 June 1984 FQ
ROOM C
3:30 PM Distributed Feedback and Dye Lasers
Jeffrey Bokor, Presider
FQ1 Grazing-incidence dye laser: current statusMICHAEL G. LITTMAN 264
FQ2 Spectral purity of distributed feedback dye lasers J. A.MclNTYRE and M. H. DUNN 264
FQ3 High-efficiency slab dye lasers F. MAZZINGHI, P.BURLAMACCHI, and V. RIVANO 264
FQ4 Flashlamp-pumped regenerative dye-laser ampli-fier F. DAVIDSON, J. HOHMAN, and J. DEGNAN 264
FQ5 Distributed feedback infrared gas lasers FRITZ K.KNEUBUHL 264
FRIDAY AFTERNOON
22 June 1984 FR
ROOM D
3:30 PM Nonlinear Effects in Fibers
C. Martin Stickley, Presider
FR1 Nonlinear optical amplification in single-mode fibers:potential applications to optical communications systems J.P. POCHOLLE, M. PAPUCHON, J. RAFFY, and E. DESURVIRE 266
FR2 Optical amplification by Raman effect in silica fiberMASATAKA NAKAZAWA 266
FR3 Nonlinear modal noise in optical fibers B. CROSIG-NANI, S. PIAZZOLLA, P. SPANO, and P. Dl PORTO 268
FRIDAY AFTERNOON
22 June 1984 FS
ROOM E
3:30 PM Nonlinear Optics: 2
J. M. Halbout, Presider
FS1 Nonlinear optical processes in lumped elementsDAVID HAAS and T. K. GUSTAFSON 268
FS2 Novel optical jet of interferometric quality G. A.REIDER, K. P. TRAAR, and A. J. SCHMIDT 268
FS3 Paper withdrawn.
FS4 Interferometric measurement of phase mismatch in po-tential second harmonic generators E. L. SINOFSKY and F.A, HOPF 270
FS5 Measurements of the nonlinear refractive index in low-index materials at 0.53 and 1.06 nm WILLIAM E. WILLIAMS,M. J. SOILEAU, and ERIC W. VAN STRYLAND "»* . 270
FS6 Silicon optical Zener switch THOMAS F. BOGGESS,STEVEN C. MOSS, IAN W. BOYD, and ARTHUR L. SMIRL 270