Spatial Rogue Waves in Photorefractive Ferroelectrics

Citation:

D ( 1 ) Pierangeli, 2 ) Di Mei, F. ( 1, 3 ) Conti, C. ( 1, E ( 1 ) Del Re, and AJ ( 4 ) Agranat. 2015. “Spatial Rogue Waves in Photorefractive Ferroelectrics.” Physical Review Letters, 115, 9. Publisher's Version

Abstract:

Rogue waves are observed as light propagates in the extreme nonlinear regime that occurs when a photorefractive ferroelectric crystal is undergoing a structural phase transition. The transmitted spatial light distribution contains bright localized spots of anomalously large intensity that follow a signature long-tail statistics that disappears as the nonlinearity is weakened. The isolated wave events form as out-of-equilibrium response and disorder enhance the Kerr-saturated nonlinearity at the critical point. Self-similarity associable to the individual observed filaments and numerical simulations of the generalized nonlinear Schrodinger equation suggests that dynamics of soliton fusions and scale invariance can microscopically play an important role in the observed rogue intensities and statistics.

Notes:

Accession Number: edselc.2-52.0-84940688543; (Physical Review Letters, 25 August 2015, 115(9)) Publication Type: Academic Journal; Rights: Copyright 2015 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.

Last updated on 08/17/2016