168 research outputs found
Cavity Soliton Laser based on mutually coupled semiconductor microresonators
We report on experimental observation of localized structures in two mutually
coupled broad-areahttp://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/images/calendar.gif
semiconductor resonators. These structures coexist with a dark homogeneous
background and they have the same properties as cavity solitons without
requiring the presence of a driving beam into the system. They can be switched
individually on and off by means of a local addressing beam
All-optical delay line using semiconductor cavity solitons
An all-optical delay line based on the lateral drift of cavity solitons in semiconductor microresonators is proposed and experimentally demonstrated. The functionalities of the device proposed as well as its performance is analyzed and compared with recent alternative methods based on the decrease of group velocity in the vicinity of resonances. We show that the current limitations can be overcome using broader devices with tailored material responses
All-optical delay line using semiconductor cavity solitons (vol 92, 011101, 2008)
Correction of Pedaci, F. and Barland, S. and Caboche, E. and Firth, W.J. and Oppo, G.L. and Tredicce, J.R. and Ackemann, T. and Scroggie, A.J. (2008) All-optical delay line using semiconductor cavity solitons. Applied Physics Letters, 92 (1). ISSN 0003-695
Microresonator defects as sources of drifting cavity solitons
Cavity solitons (CS) are localized structures appearing as single intensity peaks in the homogeneous background of the field emitted by a nonlinear (micro)resonator. In real devices, their position is strongly influenced by the presence of defects in the device structure. In this Letter we show that the interplay between these defects and a phase gradient in the driving field induces the spontaneous formation of a regular sequence of CSs moving in the gradient direction. Hence, defects behave as a device built-in CS source, where the CS generation rate can be set by controlling the system parameters
Microresonator defects as sources of drifting cavity solitons
Cavity solitons (CS) are localized structures appearing as single intensity peaks in the homogeneous background of the field emitted by a nonlinear (micro)resonator. In real devices, their position is strongly influenced by the presence of defects in the device structure. In this Letter we show that the interplay between these defects and a phase gradient in the driving field induces the spontaneous formation of a regular sequence of CSs moving in the gradient direction. Hence, defects behave as a device built-in CS source, where the CS generation rate can be set by controlling the system parameters
Vectorial dissipative solitons in vertical-cavity surface-emitting Lasers with delays
We show that the nonlinear polarization dynamics of a vertical-cavity
surface-emitting laser placed into an external cavity leads to the formation of
temporal vectorial dissipative solitons. These solitons arise as cycles in the
polarization orientation, leaving the total intensity constant. When the cavity
round-trip is much longer than their duration, several independent solitons as
well as bound states (molecules) may be hosted in the cavity. All these
solutions coexist together and with the background solution, i.e. the solution
with zero soliton. The theoretical proof of localization is given by the
analysis of the Floquet exponents. Finally, we reduce the dynamics to a single
delayed equation for the polarization orientation allowing interpreting the
vectorial solitons as polarization kinks.Comment: quasi final resubmission version, 12 pages, 9 figure
Interaction of two modulational instabilities in a semiconductor resonator
The interaction of two neighboring modulational instabilities in a coherently driven semiconductor cavity is investigated. First, an asymptotic reduction of the general equations is performed in the limit of a nearly vertical input-output characteristic. Next, a normal form is derived in the limit where the two instabilities are close to one other. An infinity of branches of periodic solutions are found to emerge from the unstable portion of the homogeneous branch. These branches have a nontrivial envelope in the bifurcation diagram that can either smoothly join the two instability points or form an isolated branch of solutions
Observation of bright polariton solitons in a semiconductor microcavity
Microcavity polaritons are composite half-light half-matter quasi-particles,
which have recently been demonstrated to exhibit rich physical properties, such
as non-equilibrium Bose-Einstein condensation, parametric scattering and
superfluidity. At the same time, polaritons have some important advantages over
photons for information processing applications, since their excitonic
component leads to weaker diffraction and stronger inter-particle interactions,
implying, respectively, tighter localization and lower powers for nonlinear
functionality. Here we present the first experimental observations of bright
polariton solitons in a strongly coupled semiconductor microcavity. The
polariton solitons are shown to be non-diffracting high density wavepackets,
that are strongly localised in real space with a corresponding broad spectrum
in momentum space. Unlike solitons known in other matter-wave systems such as
Bose condensed ultracold atomic gases, they are non-equilibrium and rely on a
balance between losses and external pumping. Microcavity polariton solitons are
excited on picosecond timescales, and thus have significant benefits for
ultrafast switching and transfer of information over their light only
counterparts, semiconductor cavity lasers (VCSELs), which have only nanosecond
response time
Observation of mode-locked spatial laser solitons
A stable nonlinear wave packet, self-localized in all three dimensions, is an
intriguing and much sought after object in nonlinear science in general and in
nonlinear photonics in particular. We report on the experimental observation of
mode-locked spatial laser solitons in a vertical-cavity surface-emitting laser
with frequency-selective feedback from an external cavity. These spontaneously
emerging and long-term stable spatio-temporal structures have a pulse length
shorter than the cavity round trip time and may pave the way to completely
independent cavity light bullets
Vector cavity solitons in broad area Vertical-Cavity Surface-Emitting lasers
We report the experimental observation of two-dimensional vector cavity solitons in a Vertical-Cavity Surface-Emitting Laser (VCSEL) under linearly polarized optical injection when varying optical injection linear polarization direction. The polarization of the cavity soliton is not the one of the optical injection as it acquires a distinct ellipticity. These experimental results are qualitatively reproduced by the spin-flip VCSEL model. Our findings open the road to polarization multiplexing when using cavity solitons in broad-area lasers as pixels in information technology
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