35 research outputs found
Integrable turbulence generated from modulational instability of cnoidal waves
We study numerically the nonlinear stage of modulational instability (MI) of
cnoidal waves, in the framework of the focusing one-dimensional Nonlinear
Schrodinger (NLS) equation. Cnoidal waves are the exact periodic solutions of
the NLS equation and can be represented as a lattice of overlapping solitons.
MI of these lattices lead to development of "integrable turbulence" [Zakharov
V.E., Stud. Appl. Math. 122, 219-234 (2009)]. We study the major
characteristics of the turbulence for dn-branch of cnoidal waves and
demonstrate how these characteristics depend on the degree of "overlapping"
between the solitons within the cnoidal wave.
Integrable turbulence, that develops from MI of dn-branch of cnoidal waves,
asymptotically approaches to it's stationary state in oscillatory way. During
this process kinetic and potential energies oscillate around their asymptotic
values. The amplitudes of these oscillations decay with time as t^{-a},
1<a<1.5, the phases contain nonlinear phase shift decaying as t^{-1/2}, and the
frequency of the oscillations is equal to the double maximal growth rate of the
MI, s=2g_{max}. In the asymptotic stationary state the ratio of potential to
kinetic energy is equal to -2. The asymptotic PDF of wave amplitudes is close
to Rayleigh distribution for cnoidal waves with strong overlapping, and is
significantly non-Rayleigh one for cnoidal waves with weak overlapping of
solitons. In the latter case the dynamics of the system reduces to two-soliton
collisions, which occur with exponentially small rate and provide up to
two-fold increase in amplitude compared with the original cnoidal wave.Comment: 36 pages, 25 figure
Rogue waves with rational profiles in unstable condensate and its solitonic model
In this brief report we study numerically the spontaneous emergence of rogue
waves in (i) modulationally unstable plane wave at its long-time statistically
stationary state and (ii) bound-state multi-soliton solutions representing the
solitonic model of this state [Gelash et al, PRL 123, 234102 (2019)]. Focusing
our analysis on the cohort of the largest rogue waves, we find their
practically identical dynamical and statistical properties for both systems,
that strongly suggests that the main mechanism of rogue wave formation for the
modulational instability case is multi-soliton interaction. Additionally, we
demonstrate that most of the largest rogue waves are very well approximated --
simultaneously in space and in time -- by the amplitude-scaled rational
breather solution of the second order.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figure
Growing of integrable turbulence
We study numerically the integrable turbulence in the framework of the
focusing one-dimensional nonlinear Schrodinger equation using a new method --
the "growing of turbulence". We add to the equation a weak controlled pumping
term and start adiabatic evolution of turbulence from statistically homogeneous
Gaussian noise. After reaching a certain level of average intensity, we switch
off the pumping and realize that the "grown up" turbulence is statistically
stationary. We measure its Fourier spectrum, the probability density function
(PDF) of intensity and the autocorrelation of intensity. Additionally, we show
that, being adiabatic, our method produces stationary states of the integrable
turbulence for the intermediate moments of pumping as well. Presently, we
consider only the turbulence of relatively small level of nonlinearity;
however, even this "moderate" turbulence is characterized by enhanced
generation of rogue waves.Comment: 6 pages, 1 figur