M² Measurement Tutorial: How to Measure Laser Beam Quality Factor

⚡ Key Takeaway

M² is measured via ISO 11146 caustic scan: focus the beam, measure beam width at 10+ positions through focus, fit to Gaussian propagation model. An automated system does this in 5-15 minutes. Target M² < 1.1 for single-mode fiber, 1.5-5.0 for multi-mode cutting lasers.

M² (beam quality factor) determines your focused spot size and thus your cutting capability. This tutorial walks through the complete measurement procedure from equipment setup to data analysis. For a broader overview of beam quality metrics including BPP and divergence, see our Beam Quality Guide.

Published: February 11, 2026
Last Updated: February 11, 2026
Skill Level: Laser Engineer / Optics Specialist

1. What M² Tells You

Physical Definition

M² is the ratio of your beam's divergence-waist product to that of an ideal Gaussian beam. M² = 1.0 is the theoretical limit (perfect TEM₀₀ mode). Real beams always have M² ≥ 1.0.

w(z) = w₀ · √(1 + (M² · λ · z / (π · w₀²))²)
w₀ = beam waist radius, λ = wavelength, z = distance from waist
Practical Impact

A beam with M² = 2 produces a focused spot with 2× the area of a M² = 1 beam using the same optics. This means 50% lower power density at the workpiece. For cutting:

• M² = 1.05: Single-mode fiber (up to ~2kW) — precision cutting
• M² = 1.5-3: Multi-mode fiber (3-12kW) — general metal cutting
• M² = 3-5: High-power industrial (12-30kW) — thick plate

2. Required Equipment

ComponentPurposeRecommendedBudget
Beam profilerMeasure beam width at each z-positionOphir-Spiricon SP928, Thorlabs BC106N$3,000-8,000
Focusing lensCreate artificial beam waist for measurementf = 100-300mm, AR coated for laser wavelength$100-500
Translation stageMove profiler along beam axis100mm+ travel, motorized preferred$500-3,000
AttenuatorReduce beam power to camera-safe levelsND filters or wedge beam sampler$200-1,000
M² analysis softwareFit beam width data to propagation modelOphir BeamGage, Thorlabs BeamAlyzerIncluded with profiler
Integrated systems: For routine measurements, consider an all-in-one M² system (Ophir BeamSquared: ~$25,000, Thorlabs M2MS: ~$18,000) that automates the entire scannable, data acquisition, and fitting process.

3. ISO 11146 Measurement Procedure

Step 1
Set up the beam path: Collimate the beam, insert focusing lens (f = 100-300mm), and mount the beam profiler on a translation stage behind the lens. Ensure the beam propagation axis is aligned with the stage travel direction.
Step 2
Locate the beam waist: Move the profiler to the approximate focus position and find the smallest beam width. Record this as the waist position z₀. The waist should be approximately at the back focal point of the lens.
Step 3
Measure beam width at 10+ positions: ISO 11146 requires minimum 10 measurements: ≥ 5 within one Rayleigh range of the waist (near-field) and ≥ 5 beyond two Rayleigh ranges (far-field). Use the D4σ (second moment) beam width method for all measurements.
Step 4
Fit the data: Plot beam width² vs z-position. This should form a hyperbola. Fit to w²(z) = A + B·z + C·z² where M² = (π / λ) · √(AC - B²/4). Most software does this automatically and reports M² for both X and Y axes.
Step 5
Validate the result: Check the fit quality (R² should be > 0.99). Repeat the measurement 3× and verify reproducibility within ±5%. Report M²x and M²y separately if the beam is non-circular. Also compute effective M² = √(M²x × M²y).

4. Common Measurement Pitfalls

❌ Too few far-field points

Without adequate far-field data, the fit cannot accurately determine beam divergence. ISO 11146 explicitly requires ≥ 5 points beyond 2× Rayleigh range. Missing these gives artificially low M².

❌ Using 1/e² width instead of D4σ

ISO 11146 mandates D4σ (second moment) beam width. The 1/e² clip-level method underestimates the width of non-Gaussian beams and gives artificially good M² values.

❌ Camera saturation

A saturated camera clips the peak of the beam profile. This artificially widens the measured beam width and inflates M². Always check the peak pixel value is below 80% of camera dynamic range.

❌ Background noise

Stray light or camera noise adds to the second-moment width calculation, inflating M². Apply proper background subtraction. ISO 11146 recommends the iterative baseline subtraction method.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do you measure M² of a laser beam?

Focus the beam through a lens, measure the beam width (D4σ method) at 10+ positions through the focus, fit to the Gaussian propagation model, extract M². ISO 11146 defines the full procedure. Automated systems complete this in 5-15 minutes.

What M² is good for laser cutting?

Single-mode fiber: M² < 1.1 (excellent). Multi-mode cutting lasers (3-12kW): M² = 1.5-3.0 (standard). High-power (12-30kW): M² = 3-5 (acceptable for thick plate). See the BPP guide for how M² relates to focused spot size and processing parameters.

What equipment do I need?

Minimum: beam profiler ($3-8K), focusing lens ($100-500), translation stage ($500-3K), attenuator ($200-1K). Or purchase an integrated M² system ($15-40K) for automated measurements. The profiler software typically includes M² fitting algorithms.

Related Guides

Measurement procedure follows ISO 11146-1:2021 (laser beam widths, divergence angles, and beam propagation ratios). Equipment pricing reflects 2025-2026 North American/European market. Always follow laser safety protocols (IEC 60825) when performing beam measurements.