About this Research Topic
Advances in High-Power Lasers for Interdisciplinary Applications
High-power laser technology is expected to meet the urgent demand for high power and high efficiency lasers in advanced laser manufacturing and military defense in the new century. It is a cutting-edge technology with important strategic significance to the national economy and national security. High-power lasers also show great application potential in the fields of energy exploration, large scientific devices, space science, environmental science, etc., and will become a powerful tool for human beings to understand and transform the world.
The goal of the Research Topic would like to address several recent developments, interdisciplinary applications of high-power lasers, such as laser field control and its application, laser detection, communication and information processing technology, laser processing and manufacturing technology, laser biology and laser medicine, laser spectroscopy technology and its application, laser imaging technology and application, and laser matter interaction. The aforementioned fields are only indicative and by no means exhaustive.
This Research Topic aims to create a collection of recent research works to cover High-power lasers in frontier interdisciplinary. The types of manuscripts include Review Articles, Research Articles, and Letters. The topics include but are not limited to:
• Novel Laser Sources and Techniques;
• Supercontinuum Generation;
• Nonlinear Frequency Conversion and Parametric Sources;
• Fiber Lasers and Integrated Photonics;
• Sensing, Imaging, and Spectroscopy;
• Strong-field Physics Pumped by High Power Laser;
• Mechanical Processing in High Power Lasers;
• Biomedical Applications of High Power Lasers.
Keywords: High-power laser, Sensing, Spectroscopy, Mechanical Processing, Biomedical
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.