Soliton-induced relativistic-scattering and amplification

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Abstract

Solitons are of fundamental importance in photonics due to applications in optical data transmission and also as a tool for investigating novel phenomena ranging from light generation at new frequencies and wave-trapping to rogue waves. Solitons are also moving scatterers: they generate refractive index perturbations moving at the speed of light. Here we found that such perturbations scatter light in an unusual way: they amplify light by the mixing of positive and negative frequencies, as we describe using a first Born approximation and numerical simulations. The simplest scenario in which these effects may be observed is within the initial stages of optical soliton propagation: a steep shock front develops that may efficiently scatter a second, weaker probe pulse into relatively intense positive and negative frequency modes with amplification at the expense of the soliton. Our results show a novel all-optical amplification scheme that relies on soliton induced scattering.

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Rubino, E., Lotti, A., Belgiorno, F., Cacciatori, S. L., Couairon, A., Leonhardt, U., & Faccio, D. (2012). Soliton-induced relativistic-scattering and amplification. Scientific Reports, 2. https://doi.org/10.1038/srep00932

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