Absence of Galilean invariance for pure-quartic solitons
Access status:
Open Access
Type
ArticleAuthor/s
Widjaja, JustinKobakhidze, Erekle
Cartwright, Tiernan R
Lourdesamy, Joshua P.
Runge, Antoine F. J.
Alexander, Tristram J.
de Sterke, C. Martijn
Abstract
Optical temporal solitons, arising from self-phase modulation and negative quadratic ($\beta_2$) dispersion, are Galilean invariant, and therefore their properties do not depend on their group velocity. This is no longer true for pure-quartic soliton pulses arising from quartic ...
See moreOptical temporal solitons, arising from self-phase modulation and negative quadratic ($\beta_2$) dispersion, are Galilean invariant, and therefore their properties do not depend on their group velocity. This is no longer true for pure-quartic soliton pulses arising from quartic ($\beta_4$) dispersion, for which a change in group velocity necessarily leads to nonzero quadratic and cubic ($\beta_3$) dispersion. Analyzing the generalized nonlinear Schrödinger equation for such dispersion relations analytically and numerically, we find that pure-quartic solitons are members of a larger family traveling at other speeds. These solitons, which appear to be stable, have a complex phase structure and have an asymmetric spectrum. Our results extend the understanding of solitons arising from high orders of dispersion.
See less
See moreOptical temporal solitons, arising from self-phase modulation and negative quadratic ($\beta_2$) dispersion, are Galilean invariant, and therefore their properties do not depend on their group velocity. This is no longer true for pure-quartic soliton pulses arising from quartic ($\beta_4$) dispersion, for which a change in group velocity necessarily leads to nonzero quadratic and cubic ($\beta_3$) dispersion. Analyzing the generalized nonlinear Schrödinger equation for such dispersion relations analytically and numerically, we find that pure-quartic solitons are members of a larger family traveling at other speeds. These solitons, which appear to be stable, have a complex phase structure and have an asymmetric spectrum. Our results extend the understanding of solitons arising from high orders of dispersion.
See less
Date
2021Source title
Physical Review AVolume
104Issue
4Publisher
American Physical SocietyFunding information
ARC DP180102234Licence
Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0Faculty/School
Faculty of Science, School of PhysicsShare