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Preferred term

two-photon absorption  

Definition

  • Two-photon absorption (TPA or 2PA) or two-photon excitation or non-linear absorption is the simultaneous absorption of two photons of identical or different frequencies in order to excite a molecule from one state (usually the ground state) to a higher energy, most commonly an excited electronic state. Absorption of two photons with different frequencies is called non-degenerate two-photon absorption. Since TPA depends on the simultaneous absorption of two photons, the probability of TPA is proportional to the square of the light intensity, thus it is a nonlinear optical process. The energy difference between the involved lower and upper states of the molecule is equal or smaller than the sum of the photon energies of the two photons absorbed. Two-photon absorption is a third-order process, with absorption cross section typically several orders of magnitude smaller than one-photon absorption cross section. (Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Two-photon_absorption)

Entry terms

  • 2-photon absorption
  • biphotonic absorption

In other languages

URI

http://data.loterre.fr/ark:/67375/MDL-C2MLDPN3-G

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