Higher-Order Modulation Instability in Nonlinear Fiber Optics
Abstract
We report theoretical, numerical, and experimental studies of higher-order modulation instability in the focusing nonlinear Schrödinger equation. This higher-order instability arises from the nonlinear superposition of elementary instabilities, associated with initial single breather evolution followed by a regime of complex, yet deterministic, pulse splitting. We analytically describe the process using the Darboux transformation and compare with experiments in optical fiber. We show how a suitably low frequency modulation on a continuous wave field induces higher-order modulation instability splitting with the pulse characteristics at different phases of evolution related by a simple scaling relationship. We anticipate that similar processes are likely to be observed in many other systems including plasmas, Bose-Einstein condensates, and deep water waves.
- Publication:
-
Physical Review Letters
- Pub Date:
- December 2011
- DOI:
- Bibcode:
- 2011PhRvL.107y3901E
- Keywords:
-
- 42.65.Tg;
- 42.65.Re;
- 42.65.Sf;
- 42.81.Dp;
- Optical solitons;
- nonlinear guided waves;
- Ultrafast processes;
- optical pulse generation and pulse compression;
- Dynamics of nonlinear optical systems;
- optical instabilities optical chaos and complexity and optical spatio-temporal dynamics;
- Propagation scattering and losses;
- solitons