271 research outputs found
Ginzburg-Landau equation bound to the metal-dielectric interface and transverse nonlinear optics with amplified plasmon polaritons
Using a multiple-scale asymptotic approach, we have derived the complex cubic
Ginzburg-Landau equation for amplified and nonlinearly saturated surface
plasmon polaritons propagating and diffracting along a metal-dielectric
interface. An important feature of our method is that it explicitly accounts
for nonlinear terms in the boundary conditions, which are critical for a
correct description of nonlinear surface waves. Using our model we have
analyzed filamentation and discussed bright and dark spatially localized
structures of plasmons.Comment: http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevA.81.03385
Looking at a soliton through the prism of optical supercontinuum
A traditional view on solitons in optical fibers as robust particle-like
structures suited for informa- tion transmission has been significantly altered
and broadened over the past decade, when solitons have been found to play the
major role in generation of octave broad supercontinuum spectra in
photonic-crystal and other types of optical fibers. This remarkable spectral
broadening is achieved through complex processes of dispersive radiation being
scattered from, emitted and transformed by solitons. Thus solitons have emerged
as the major players in nonlinear frequency conversion in optical fibers.
Unexpected analogies of these processes have been found with dynamics of
ultracold atoms and ocean waves. This colloquium focuses on recent
understanding and new insights into physics of soliton-radiation interaction
and supercontinuum generation.Comment: http://rmp.aps.org/abstract/RMP/v82/i2/p1287_1 (some figures have
been deleted due to space limits imposed by archive
Tricritical Behavior of Random Systems with Coupling to a Nonfluctuating Parameter
The influence of disordering upon the critical behavior of a system with hidden degrees of freedom is considered. It is shown that there is a tricritical behavior in the constrained system, while in the unconstrained system only phase transitions of the second order occur. © 1997 Elsevier Science B.V.I Partially supported by State Program “Actual Problems in Condensed Matter Physics: Neutron Studies” (Projects No. 96-104, 96-305) and Russian Foundation for Basic Researches (Project No. 97-02-17315), Russian Federation
Influence of Rare Regions on Quantum Phase Transition in Antiferromagnets with Hidden Degrees of Freedom
The effects of rare regions on the critical properties of quantum antiferromagnets with hidden degrees of freedom within the renormalization group is discussed. It is shown that for 'constrained' systems the stability range on the phase diagram remains the same as in the mean-field theory while for 'unconstrained' systems the stability range is effectively decreased
Stable multiple-charged localized optical vortices in cubic-quintic nonlinear media
The stability of two-dimensional bright vortex solitons in a media with
focusing cubic and defocusing quintic nonlinearities is investigated
analytically and numerically. It is proved that above some critical beam powers
not only one- and two-charged but also multiple-charged stable vortex solitons
do exist. A vortex soliton occurs robust with respect to symmetry-breaking
modulational instability in the self-defocusing regime provided that its radial
profile becomes flattened, so that a self-trapped wave beam gets a pronounced
surface. It is demonstrated that the dynamics of a slightly perturbed stable
vortex soliton resembles an oscillation of a liquid stream having a surface
tension. Using the idea of sustaining effective surface tension for spatial
vortex soliton in a media with competing nonlinearities the explanation of a
suppression of the modulational instability is proposed.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures. Submitted to Journal of Optics A. The proceedings
of the workshop NATO ARW, Kiev 2003 Singular Optics 200
Theory of radiation trapping by the accelerating solitons in optical fibers
We present a theory describing trapping of the normally dispersive radiation
by the Raman solitons in optical fibers. Frequency of the radiation component
is continuously blue shifting, while the soliton is red shifting. Underlying
physics of the trapping effect is in the existence of the inertial gravity-like
force acting on light in the accelerating frame of reference. We present
analytical calculations of the rate of the opposing frequency shifts of the
soliton and trapped radiation and find it to be greater than the rate of the
red shift of the bare Raman soliton. Our findings are essential for
understanding of the continuous shift of the high frequency edge of the
supercontinuum spectra generated in photonic crystal fibers towards higher
frequencies.Comment: Several misprints in text and formulas corrected. 10 pages, 9
figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
Modulational instability of solitary waves in non-degenerate three-wave mixing: The role of phase symmetries
We show how the analytical approach of Zakharov and Rubenchik [Sov. Phys.
JETP {\bf 38}, 494 (1974)] to modulational instability (MI) of solitary waves
in the nonlinear Schr\"oedinger equation (NLS) can be generalised for models
with two phase symmetries. MI of three-wave parametric spatial solitons due to
group velocity dispersion (GVD) is investigated as a typical example of such
models. We reveal a new branch of neck instability, which dominates the usual
snake type MI found for normal GVD. The resultant nonlinear evolution is
thereby qualitatively different from cases with only a single phase symmetry.Comment: 4 pages with figure
Instabilities of Higher-Order Parametric Solitons. Filamentation versus Coalescence
We investigate stability and dynamics of higher-order solitary waves in
quadratic media, which have a central peak and one or more surrounding rings.
We show existence of two qualitatively different behaviours. For positive phase
mismatch the rings break up into filaments which move radially to initial ring.
For sufficient negative mismatches rings are found to coalesce with central
peak, forming a single oscillating filament.Comment: 5 pages, 7 figure
Macroscopic Zeno effect in Su-Schrieffer-Heeger photonic topological insulator
The quantum Zeno effect refers to slowing down of the decay of a quantum
system that is affected by frequent measurements. Nowadays, the significance of
this paradigm is extended far beyond quantum systems, where it was introduced,
finding physical and mathematical analogies in such phenomena as the
suppression of output beam decay by sufficiently strong absorption introduced
in guiding optical systems. In the latter case, the effect is often termed as
macroscopic Zeno effect. Recent studies in optics, where enhanced transparency
of the entire system was observed upon the increase of the absorption, were
largely focused on the systems obeying parity-time symmetry, hence, the
observed effect was attributed to the symmetry breaking. While manifesting
certain similarities in the behavior of the transparency of the system with the
mentioned studies, the macroscopic Zeno phenomenon reported here in topological
photonic system is far more general in nature. In particular, we show that it
does not require the existence of exceptional points, and that it is based on
the suppression of decay for only a subspace of modes that can propagate in the
system, alike the quantum Zeno dynamics. By introducing controlled losses in
one of the arms of a topological insulator comprising two closely positioned
Su-Schrieffer-Heeger arrays, we demonstrate the macroscopic Zeno effect, which
manifests itself in an increase of the transparency of the system with respect
to the topological modes created at the interface between two arrays. The
phenomenon remains robust against disorder in the non-Hermitian topological
regime. In contrast, coupling a topological array with a non-topological one
results in a monotonic decrease in output power with increasing absorption
- …