DocumentCode :
1940474
Title :
Coherent and incoherent rogue waves in seeded supercontinuum generation
Author :
Sorensen, S.T. ; Larsen, C. ; Møller, Uffe ; Moselund, P.M. ; Thomsen, C.L. ; Bang, Ole
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Photonics Eng., Tech. Univ. of Denmark, Lyngby, Denmark
fYear :
2013
fDate :
12-16 May 2013
Firstpage :
1
Lastpage :
1
Abstract :
Summary form only given. The shot-to-shot stability of a supercontiuum (SC) can be controlled both in terms of coherence and intensity stability by modulating the input pulse with a weak seed [1-3]. In the long-pulse regime, the SC generation is initiated by noise-seeded modulation instability (MI), which breaks the pump into solitons and dispersive waves. To control the spectral evolution and reduce the noise, it has been proposed to provide a seed, i.e. a weak pulse with a frequency offset relative to the pump, within the MI gain spectrum in order to ensure a deterministic rather than noise-seeded pulse break-up [1, 2]. Seeding the pulse break-up has likewise been used to control the generation of otherwise statistically rare large-amplitude rogue solitons [2-4]. In this work, we numerically investigate the influence of the MI gain spectrum on the pulse break-up and rogue wave generation. We find that the results can be clearly divided into a number of distinct dynamical regimes depending on the initial four-wave mixing process and demonstrate that seeding can be used to generate coherent and incoherent rogue waves.Figure 1 shows simulation results of seeded SC generation in a fiber with a zero-dispersion wavelength (ZDW) at 1054 nm for pump wavelengths of 1055 and 1075 nm, respectively. The MI gain spectrum depends strongly on the pump wavelength and the MI gain bandwidth decreases when the pump is moved away from the ZDW, as seen in the insets in Fig. 1. The seed causes a beating of the temporal profile, which, if chosen correctly, leads to a deterministic pulse break-up. When the pump is close to the ZDW [Fig. 1(a)], the MI gain is relatively small at the seed wavelength (1070.1 nm) and slowly increasing with wavelength. The temporal profile is therefore only slowly broken up into solitons. This means that the solitons are mainly generated from the pulse center where the peak power is highest. The solitons have time to redshift before the cascade is amplified - nd the dynamics are relatively turbulent. In contrast to this, pumping further from the ZDW [Fig. 1(b)] gives a much larger gain at the seed wavelength (1090.6 nm) that increases more rapidly with wavelength. This causes a fast breakup of the temporal pulse, where the individual temporal fringes generate fundamental solitons in a controlled fashion that almost resembles soliton fission. The most powerful solitons are still generated near the center of the pulse where the power is highest. These powerful rogue solitons only collide with the smaller solitons generated from the trailing edge of the pulse. Interestingly, a closer inspection reveals that the rogue soliton is generated incoherently when pumping close to the ZDW, but coherently when the pump is shifted away from the ZDW.At the conference we will discuss the influence of the MI gain spectrum in more detail and demonstrate that the coherent pulse break-up afforded by seeding is washed out by turbulent solitonic dynamics when the pump peak power is increased to the kW level.
Keywords :
multiwave mixing; optical fibre dispersion; optical modulation; optical noise; optical pumping; optical solitons; pulse modulation; red shift; supercontinuum generation; MI gain bandwidth; MI gain spectrum; ZDW; coherent pulse break-up; deterministic pulse break-up; dispersive waves; frequency offset; fundamental solitons; incoherent rogue waves; individual temporal fringes; initial four-wave mixing process; input pulse modulation; intensity stability; kW level; long-pulse regime; noise reduction; noise-seeded modulation instability; noise-seeded pulse break-up; optical fiber; pulse center; pulse trailing edge; pump peak power; pump wavelengths; rare large-amplitude rogue solitons; redshift; rogue wave generation; seed wavelength; seeded SC generation; seeded supercontinuum generation; shot-to-shot stability; soliton fission; spectral evolution; temporal profile; temporal pulse breakup; turbulent solitonic dynamics; wavelength 1054 nm; wavelength 1055 nm; wavelength 1070.1 nm; wavelength 1075 nm; wavelength 1090.6 nm; weak pulse; weak seed; zero-dispersion wavelength; Modulation; Numerical stability; Optical fibers; Photonics; Solitons; Stability analysis; Supercontinuum generation;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Lasers and Electro-Optics Europe (CLEO EUROPE/IQEC), 2013 Conference on and International Quantum Electronics Conference
Conference_Location :
Munich
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4799-0593-5
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/CLEOE-IQEC.2013.6801969
Filename :
6801969
Link To Document :
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