Generation and Dynamics of Optical Dissipative Soliton
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Abstract
Optical fi ber based laser has emerged as a big contender in industrial as well as experimental
laser. Their performance can be improved by employing the concept of soliton.
This thesis presents theoretical investigations on the generation, stability and interaction
of optical dissipative solitons in semiconductor doped fiber laser cavity under the
influence of various higher order nonlinear and dispersive effects. The soliton conditions
are established and the roles of the dispersive as well as nonlinear effects on the dissipative
solitons are found using a variational method based analytical approach. The
analytically results are veri fied by split-step Fourier method based numerical approach.
Phase controlled and temporal separation controlled soliton switching are investigated
through interaction of two dissipative solitons.
Optical dissipative soliton is generated in a lossy fiber with cubic-quintic nonlinearity,
multi-photon absorption and gain dispersion. Rayleigh's dissipative function in
conjugation with variational method is used to analytically solve the governing complex
cubic-quintic Ginzburg-Landau equation and validated numerically. Impacts of
two photon and three photon absorptions that arise due to positive imaginary parts
of third and fifth order susceptibility respectively are found to be detrimental on the
pulse as well as soliton. The negative imaginary part of fifth order susceptibility may
lead to three photon emission, which provides an alternative gain mechanism for the
stable dissipative solitons, provided that it is not too strong, to avoid the onset of the
blowup.
Real fibers may feature a variety of imperfection like shape variation, inhomogeneous
refractive index and dopant concentration, bending effects etc. These effects are
random in nature and manifest themselves through random variations of the group
velocity dispersion. Dissipative solitons are generated in such random dispersive optical
fiber laser cavity with cubic-quintic nonlinearity, multi-photon absorption and
gain dispersion. They also remain stable under the action of perturbation in the form
of the random dispersion as well as noise. The dissipative solitons generated in both
random and non-random environment are bistable, with two different pulses, low- and
high-amplitude ones, found for a given width. In the presence of the nonlinear gain,the low-amplitude dissipative soliton is stable, while its high-amplitude counterpart is
subject to the blowup instability. Interactions between the dissipative solitons lead
to fusion of high-amplitude solitons into breathers, and periodic merger-splitting sequences
for low-amplitude ones. Relative-phase-controlled switching is obtained by the
interaction of two dissipative solitons.
Dispersion management, a technique for soliton stabilization is used for generation
of dissipative soliton in a fiber laser cavity with cubic-quintic nonlinearity, multiphoton
absorption and gain dispersion. Each of the anomalous and normal fiber segments of the
dispersion map is having some random dispersion
fluctuation. The dispersion-managed
dissipative breather solitons are robust against certain level of noise. Soliton switching
between low to high speed regime is achieved by varying the temporal separation as
well as relative phase between the dispersion-managed dissipative solitons.
Due to the ultrashort duration, dissipative solitons in ber laser cavities are subject
to higher order dispersion and nonlinear perturbations, particularly, third order dispersion
and intrapulse Raman scattering. Stable dissipative solitons are generated in such
systems. Roles of the perturbations on dissipative solitons are shown in a doped fi ber
cavity with cubic-quintic nonlinearity, multi-photon absorption and gain dispersion.
The results reported in the thesis suggest new experiments on dissipative soliton
fi ber laser and dispersion-managed dissipative soliton laser, all-optical switching devices,
all-optical data processing and all-optical delay lines.
Description
PhD Thesis
