Search results for "Modulational instability"
showing 10 items of 65 documents
Multiple four-wave mixing-induced modulational instability in highly birefringent fibers.
2001
Theoretical and experimental results are presented that illustrate efficient generation of new optical frequencies by means of induced modulational instability in birefringent fibers for an initially highly phase-mismatched process. Modulational instability is assisted by multiple four-wave mixing interactions. This technique relaxes the strict spectral limitations imposed by the phase-matching conditions on the signal used for frequency conversion by means of modulational instability.
Dark-and-bright rogue waves in long wave-short wave resonance
2014
Nonlinear Photonics, Bragg Gratings, Photosensitivity, and Poling in Glass Waveguides, in Proceedings Advanced Photonics, Part of Advanced Photonics, Barcelona, Spain, 28-31 July 2014
Transverse nonlinear optics in heavy-metal-oxide glass
2008
6 pags. ; 9 figs.
Incoherent modulation instability in instantaneous nonlinear Kerr media
2005
We demonstrate theoretically and experimentally in an optical fiber system that partially temporally incoherent light exhibits modulational instability during its propagation in an instantaneous response nonlinear medium. We show that the modulation frequency and gain are substantially increased with respect to the corresponding values of coherent modulational instability.
Experimental observation of incoherent modulation instability in standard optical fibers
2005
In this work, we demonstrate theoretically and experimentally that a partially temporally incoherent light can exhibit modulational instability when propagating in an optical fiber with instantaneous nonlinear Kerr response.
More on Transmission-Line Solitons
1996
The study of solitons on discrete lattices dates back to the early days of soliton theory (Frenkel and Kontorova 1939, Fermi et al. 1955) and is of great physical importance. Generally, the discrete nonlinear equations which model these lattices cannot be solved analytically. Consequently, one looks for possible pulse-soliton solutions in the continuum or long wavelength approximation, that is, solitons with a width much larger than the electrical length of a unit section of the electrical network, as described in Chap.3. When this approach is not workable, one has to use numerical approaches (Zabusky 1973, Eilbeck 1991) or simulations. Nevertheless, there exist some lattice models for whic…
Role of Polarization Mode Dispersion on Modulational Instability in Optical Fibers
2001
We introduce the theory of modulational instability (MI) of electromagnetic waves in fibers with random polarization mode dispersion. Applying a linear stability analysis and stochastic calculus, we show that the MI gain spectrum reads as the maximal eigenvalue of a constant effective matrix. In the limiting cases of small or large fluctuations, we give explicit expressions for the MI gain spectra. In the general configurations, we give the explicit form of the effective matrix and numerically compute the maximal eigenvalue. In the anomalous dispersion regime, polarization dispersion widens the unstable bandwidth. Depending on the type of variations of the birefringence parameters, polariza…
Strong four-photon conversion regime of cross-phase-modulation-induced modulational instability
2000
We investigate theoretically and experimentally the strong conversion regime of parametric four-photon amplification or induced modulational instability in the normal dispersion regime of propagation in a highly birefringent fiber. Such optical mixing is observed by injecting a tunable linearly polarized (along the fast axis) anti-Stokes signal wave copropagating with a pump equisplitted between the fiber axes (i.e., linearly polarized at 45\ifmmode^\circ\else\textdegree\fi{}) which entail that the two pump modes experience cross-phase modulation. In agreement with a four-wave model developed to study the depleted regime of the mixing process, we observe that the strongest conversion occurs…
Vector Modulational Instabilities and Soliton Experiments
1999
In optical fibers, the interaction between nonlinear and dispersive effects leads to phenomena such as modulational instability (MI)[1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6], in which a continuous or quasi-continuous wave undergoes a modulation of its amplitude or phase in the presence of noise or any other small perturbation. The perturbation can originate from quantum noise (spontaneous-MI) or from a frequency shifted signal wave (induced-MI). MI has been observed for the first time for a single pump wave propagating in a standard non birefringe.nt fiber (scalar MI)[7]. It has been shown that scalar MI only occurs when the group velocity dispersion (GVD) is negative (anomalous dispersion regime).
Dark- and bright-rogue-wave solutions for media with long-wave–short-wave resonance
2014
5 pags.; 5 figs.; PACS number(s): 46.40.−f, 47.20.Ky, 47.35.−i, 47.52.+j