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The model usually designated as Lugiato–Lefever equation (LLE) was formulated in 1987 by
Luigi Lugiato Luigi Lugiato (born December 17, 1944) is an Italian physicist and professor emeritus at University of Insubria (Varese/Como). He is best known for his work in theoretical nonlinear and quantum optics, and especially for the Lugiato–Lefever equ ...
and René Lefever as a paradigm for spontaneous
pattern formation The science of pattern formation deals with the visible, ( statistically) orderly outcomes of self-organization and the common principles behind similar patterns in nature. In developmental biology, pattern formation refers to the generation of ...
in nonlinear optical systems. The patterns originate from the interaction of a coherent field, that is injected into a resonant optical cavity, with a
Kerr Kerr may refer to: People *Kerr (surname) *Kerr (given name) Places ;United States *Kerr Township, Champaign County, Illinois *Kerr, Montana, A US census-designated place *Kerr, Ohio, an unincorporated community *Kerr County, Texas Other uses ...
medium that fills the cavity. The same equation governs two types of patterns: stationary patterns that arise in the planes orthogonal with respect to the direction of propagation of light (''transverse patterns'') and patterns that form in the longitudinal direction (''longitudinal'' ''patterns''), travel along the cavity with the velocity of light in the medium and give rise to a sequence of pulses in the output of the cavity. The case of longitudinal patterns is intrinsically linked to the phenomenon of “
Kerr frequency comb Kerr frequency combs (also known as microresonator frequency combs) are optical frequency combs which are generated from a continuous wave pump laser by the Kerr nonlinearity. This coherent conversion of the pump laser to a frequency comb takes pl ...
s” in microresonators, discovered in 2007 by Tobias Kippenberg and collaborators, that has raised a very lively interest, especially because of the applicative avenue it has opened. __TOC__


The equation

Figure 1 shows a light beam that propagates in the z direction, while x and y are the transverse directions. If we assume that the electric field as (x,y,z,t), where t denotes time, is linearly polarized and therefore can be treated as a scalar, we can express it in terms of the slowly varying normalized complex envelope E(x,y,z,t) in this way :(x,y,z,t)\propto E(x,y,z,t)e^ + \text where \omega_0 is the frequency of the light beam that is injected into the cavity and \tilde of the light velocity in the Kerr medium that fills the cavity. For definiteness, consider a ring cavity (Fig. 2) of very high quality (High-Q cavity). In the original LLE, one assumes conditions such that the envelope E is independent of the longitudinal variable z (i.e. uniform along the cavity), so that E=E(x,y,t). The equation reads :\nabla^2_\perp E=\frac+\frac where \bar and \bar, \bar are normalized temporal and spatial variables, i.e. \bar=\kappa t, \bar=x/\ell_d, \bar=y/\ell_d, with \kappa being the cavity decay rate or cavity linewidth, \ell_d the diffraction length in the cavity. \theta=(\omega_c-\omega_0)/\kappa is the cavity detuning parameter, with \omega_c being the cavity frequency nearest to \omega_0. In the righthand side of Eq.(), E_\text is the normalized amplitude of the input field that is injected into the cavity, the second is the decay term, the third is the detuning term, the fourth is the cubic nonlinear term that takes into account the Kerr medium, the last term with the transverse Laplacian \nabla_\perp^2 describes diffraction in the paraxial approximation. Conditions of self-focusing are assumed. We refer to Eq.() as the transverse LLE. Some years later than, there was the formulation of the longitudinal LLE, in which diffraction is replaced by dispersion. In this case one assumes that the envelope E is independent of the transverse variables x and y, so that E=E(z,t). The longitudinal LLE reads with \bar=z/a, where a depends, in particular on the dispersion parameter at second order. Conditions of anomalous dispersion are assumed. An important point is that, once E(\bar,\bar) is obtained by solving Eq.(), one must come back to the original variables z,t and replace z by z-\tildet, so that a z-dependent stationary solution (stationary pattern) becomes a travelling pattern (with velocity \tilde). From a mathematical viewpoint, the LLE amounts to a driven, damped, detuned
nonlinear Schroedinger equation In mathematics and science, a nonlinear system is a system in which the change of the output is not proportional to the change of the input. Nonlinear problems are of interest to engineers, biologists, physicists, mathematicians, and many othe ...
. The transverse LLE () is in 2D from the spatial viewpoint. In a waveguide configuration E depends only on one spatial variable, say x, and the transverse Laplacian is replaced by \frac and one has the transverse LLE in 1D. The longitudinal LLE () is equivalent to the transverse LLE in 1D. In some papers dealing with the longitudinal case one considers dispersion beyond the second order, so that Eq.() includes also terms with derivatives of order higher than second with respect to \bar.


Uniform stationary solutions. Connection with ''

optical bistability In optics, optical bistability is an attribute of certain optical devices where two resonant transmissions states are possible and stable, dependent on the input. Optical devices with a feedback mechanism, e.g. a laser, provide two methods of achi ...
''.
Four-wave mixing Four-wave mixing (FWM) is an intermodulation phenomenon in nonlinear optics, whereby interactions between two or three wavelengths produce two or one new wavelengths. It is similar to the third-order intercept point in electrical systems. Four-wave ...
and
pattern formation The science of pattern formation deals with the visible, ( statistically) orderly outcomes of self-organization and the common principles behind similar patterns in nature. In developmental biology, pattern formation refers to the generation of ...
.

Let us focus on the case in which the envelope E is constant, i.e. on the stationary solutions that are independent of all spatial variables. By dropping all derivatives in Eqs.() and (), and taking the
squared modulus In mathematics, a square is the result of multiplication, multiplying a number by itself. The verb "to square" is used to denote this operation. Squaring is the same as exponentiation, raising to the power 2 (number), 2, and is denoted by a ...
, one obtains the stationary equation If we plot the stationary curve of , E, ^2 as a function of , E_\text, ^2, when \theta>\sqrt we obtain a curve as that shown in Fig.3. The curve is S-shaped and there is an interval of values of , E_\text, ^2 where one has three stationary states. However, the states that lie in the segment with negative slope are unstable, so that in the interval there are two coexisting stable stationary states: this phenomenon is called ''optical bistability''. If the input intensity , E_\text, ^2 is increased and then decreased, one covers a hysteresis cycle. If we refer to the modes of the empty cavity, in the case of the uniform stationary solutions described by Eq.() the electric field is singlemode, corresponding to the mode of frequency \omega_c quasi-resonant with the input frequency \omega_0. In the transverse configuration of Eq.(), in the case of these stationary solutions E corresponds to a singlemode plane wave e^ with k_x=k_y=0, where k_x and k_y are the transverse components of the wave vector, exactly as the input field E_\text. The cubic Kerr nonlinearity of Eqs.() and () gives rise to
four-wave mixing Four-wave mixing (FWM) is an intermodulation phenomenon in nonlinear optics, whereby interactions between two or three wavelengths produce two or one new wavelengths. It is similar to the third-order intercept point in electrical systems. Four-wave ...
(FWM), which can generate other modes, so that the envelope E displays a spatial pattern: in the transverse plane in the case of Eq.(), along the cavity in the case of Eq.().


Transverse patterns and ''cavity solitons''

In the transverse case of Eq.() the pattern arises from the interplay of FWM and diffraction. The FWM can give rise, for example, to processes in which pairs of photons with k_x=k_y=0 are absorbed and, simultaneously, the system emits pairs of photons with k_x=\bar_x, k_y=0 and k_x=-\bar_x, k_y=0 in such a way that the total energy of photons, and their total momentum, are conserved (Fig.4). Actually further FWM processes enter into play, so that E(x,y) assumes the configuration of a hexagonal pattern (see Fig.5). A pattern displays an ordered array of intensity peaks. It is possible to generate also isolated intensity peaks, that are called ''cavity soliton''s (see Fig. 6). Since cavity solitons can be “written”and “erased” one by one in the transverse plane like in a blackboard, they are of great interest for applications to optical information processing and telecommunications.


Longitudinal patterns and cavity solitons

In the longitudinal case of Eq.() the patterns arise from the interplay between FWM and dispersion. The FWM can give rise, for example, to processes in which pairs of photons of the longitudinal mode quasi-resonant with \omega_0 are absorbed and, simultaneously, the system emits photon pairs corresponding to cavity modes symmetrically adjacent to the quasi-resonant mode, in such a way that the total photon energy, as well as the total longitudinal photon momentum, are conserved. Figure 7 shows an example of the patterns that are generated, and travel along the cavity and out of the cavity. Like in the transverse case, also in the longitudinal configuration single or multiple Kerr cavity solitons can be generated; Figure 8 illustrates the case of a single cavity soliton that circulates in the cavity and produces a sequence of narrow pulses in the output. Such solitons have been observed for the first time in a fiber cavity. It is important to note that the instability which originates longitudinal patterns and cavity solitons in the LLE is a special case of the multimode instability of optical bistability, predicted by Bonifacio and Lugiato in and first observed experimentally in.


Microresonator Kerr frequency combs and cavity solitons

Optical frequency combs constitute an equidistant set of laser frequencies that can be employed to count the cycles of light. This technique, introduced by Theodor Haensch and
John Hall John Hall may refer to: Academics * John Hall (NYU President) (fl. c. 1890), American academic * John A. Hall (born 1949), sociology professor at McGill University, Montreal * John F. Hall (born 1951), professor of classics at Brigham Young Unive ...
using mode-locked lasers, has led to myriad applications. The work demonstrated the realization of broadband optical frequency combs exploiting the whispering gallery modes activated by a CW laser field injected into a high-Q microresonator filled with a Kerr medium, that gives rise to FWM. Since that time Kerr frequency combs (KFC), whose bandwidth can exceed an octave with repetition rates in the microwave to THz frequencies, have been generated in a wide variety of microresonators; for reviews on this subject see e.g. They offer substantial potential for miniaturization and chip-scale photonic integration, as well as for power reduction. Today KFC generation is a mature field, and this technology has been applied to several areas, including coherent telecommunications, spectroscopy, atomic clocks as well as laser ranging and astrophysical spectrometer calibration. A key impetus to these developments has been the realization of Kerr cavity solitons in microresonators, opening the possibility of utilizing Kerr cavity solitons in photonic integrated microresonators. The longitudinal LLE () provides a spatio-temporal picture of the involved phenomena, but from the spectral viewpoint its solutions correspond to KFC. The link between the topic of optical KFC and the LLE was theoretically developed in. These authors showed that the LLE (or generalizations including higher order dispersion terms) is the model which describes the generation of KFC and is capable of predicting their properties when the system parameters are varied. The spontaneous formation of spatial patterns and solitons travelling along the cavity described by the LLE is the spatiotemporal equivalent of the frequency combs and governs their features. The rather idealized conditions assumed in the formulation of the LLE, especially the high-Q condition, have been perfectly materialized by the spectacular technological progress that has occurred in the meantime in the field of photonics and has led, in particular, to the discovery of KFC.


Quantum aspects

The two photons that, as shown in Fig.4, are emitted in symmetrically tilted directions in the FWM process, are in a state of ''
quantum entanglement Quantum entanglement is the phenomenon that occurs when a group of particles are generated, interact, or share spatial proximity in a way such that the quantum state of each particle of the group cannot be described independently of the state of ...
'': they are precisely correlated, for example in energy and momentum. This fact is fundamental for the quantum aspects of optical patterns. For instance, the difference between the intensities of the two symmetrical beams is squeezed, i.e. exhibits fluctuations below the shot noise level; the longitudinal analogue of this phenomenon has been observed experimentally in KFC. In turn, such quantum aspects are basic for the field of
quantum imaging Quantum imaging is a new sub-field of quantum optics that exploits quantum correlations such as quantum entanglement of the electromagnetic field in order to image objects with a resolution or other imaging criteria that is beyond what is possible ...
.


Review articles

For reviews on the subject of the LLE, see also.


See also

*
Four-wave mixing Four-wave mixing (FWM) is an intermodulation phenomenon in nonlinear optics, whereby interactions between two or three wavelengths produce two or one new wavelengths. It is similar to the third-order intercept point in electrical systems. Four-wave ...
*
Frequency comb In optics, a frequency comb is a laser source whose spectrum consists of a series of discrete, equally spaced frequency lines. Frequency combs can be generated by a number of mechanisms, including periodic modulation (in amplitude and/or phase) of a ...
*
Kerr frequency comb Kerr frequency combs (also known as microresonator frequency combs) are optical frequency combs which are generated from a continuous wave pump laser by the Kerr nonlinearity. This coherent conversion of the pump laser to a frequency comb takes pl ...
*
Nonlinear Schroedinger equation In mathematics and science, a nonlinear system is a system in which the change of the output is not proportional to the change of the input. Nonlinear problems are of interest to engineers, biologists, physicists, mathematicians, and many othe ...
*
Optical bistability In optics, optical bistability is an attribute of certain optical devices where two resonant transmissions states are possible and stable, dependent on the input. Optical devices with a feedback mechanism, e.g. a laser, provide two methods of achi ...
*
Pattern formation The science of pattern formation deals with the visible, ( statistically) orderly outcomes of self-organization and the common principles behind similar patterns in nature. In developmental biology, pattern formation refers to the generation of ...


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Lugiato-Lefever equation Solitons Nonlinear optics Photonics