The chirped optical pulses undergoing self-focusing and splitting into multiple filamentation passing through a Kerr medium-carbon disulfide (CS2) are studied experimentally and numerically. At the particular spatial position, modulation growth takes place from the experimental result. The process of modulation growth with different pulsed chirp is analyzed. It is found that with the pulsed chirp in-creasing (equal to the pulse width increasing), modulation growth of chirped opti-cal pulses is delayed and the average input power also increases. The simulation results are in agreement with the experimental results.