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Transverse modes have a field vector normal to the
direction of propogation and are determined by the geometry of the laser or
waveguide cavity and any limiting apertures. Waveguide modes are characterized
as TE (transverse electric) with the electric vector normal, and TE (transverse
magnetic) with the magnetic vector normal. In general, laser modes that do not
have wall boundary conditions are designated TEM (transvers electric magnetic)
with both vectors normal to the direction of propogation. The lowest order mode
is the Gaussian TEM00. The appearance that higher-order modes take
depends upon whether the limiting apertures are circular or rectancular. The
three lowest-order modes for a circularly symmetric cavity are shown
below.
The higher order the mode, the smaller the beam
diameter (for a given geometry), the lower the divergence, and the smaller the
M2 value (M2 = 1 for a pure TEM00 beam). The
higher order the mode, the more uniform the beam cross-section. Very
high-order-mode beams have a top-hat shape |