4.8 Article

XPM-Induced Vector Asymmetrical Soliton with Spectral Period Doubling in Mode-Locked Fiber Laser

Journal

LASER & PHOTONICS REVIEWS
Volume 15, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/lpor.202000216

Keywords

coupled dissipative resonators; cross phase modulations; mode‐ locking lasers; period doublings; real‐ time spectroscopies; solitons

Funding

  1. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities [2019QNA5003]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [61705193, 11774310, 61525505, 62035010, 61975144, 61805212]

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The study reports a novel soliton operation observed in a mode-locked fiber laser, where XPM induces and sustains the vector asymmetrical soliton with spectral period doubling. The XPM-induced VAS is characterized by an asymmetrical steady state distinct from other soliton forms, contributing to further research on optical nonlinear dynamics and chaos.
Cross phase modulation (XPM) can induce soliton trapping in nonlinear medium, which has been employed to achieve vector soliton, optical switching, and optical analog of gravity-like potentials. Here, the first observation of a novel soliton operation is reported whose wavelength exhibits redshift and blueshift periodically in a mode-locked fiber laser under appropriate birefringence and dispersion map. XPM dominates the dynamics by inducing and sustaining the vector asymmetrical soliton (VAS) with spectral period doubling, and exhibits a unique trajectory of pulse trapping. The XPM-induced VAS is an idiosyncratic steady state featured with asymmetry in the model based on the coupled Ginzburg-Landau equation, which depicts the distinct pulse features in comparison with vector soliton, soliton molecule, and traditional period-doubling evolutions. The two orthogonal polarized directions of mode-locked fiber laser can be regarded as the XPM-coupled dissipative resonators guiding the further study of the optical nonlinear dynamics and chaos for soliton, which is helpful to laser design and brings useful insights into nonlinear science and applications.

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