TY - JOUR
T1 - Interactions of incoherent localized beams in a photorefractive medium
AU - Zhang, Yiqi
AU - Belić, Milivoj R.
AU - Zheng, Huaibin
AU - Chen, Haixia
AU - Li, Changbiao
AU - Xu, Jianeng
AU - Zhang, Yanpeng
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2014 Optical Society of America.
PY - 2014/10/1
Y1 - 2014/10/1
N2 - We numerically investigate interactions between two bright or dark incoherent localized beams in a strontium barium niobate photorefractive crystal in one dimension, using the coherent density method. For the case of bright beams, if the interacting beams are in-phase, they attract each other during propagation and form bound breathers; if out-of-phase, the beams repel each other and fly away. The bright incoherent beams do not radiate much and form long-lived, well-defined breathers or quasi-stable solitons. If the phase difference is π/2, the interacting beams may both attract or repel each other, depending on the interval between the two beams, the beam widths, and the degree of coherence. For the case of dark incoherent beams, in addition to the above, the interactions also depend on the symmetry of the incident beams. As already known, an even-symmetric incident beam tends to split into a doublet, whereas an odd-symmetric incident beam tends to split into a triplet. When launched in pairs, the dark beams display dynamics consistent with such a picture and in general obey soliton-like conservation laws, so that the collisions are mostly elastic, leading to little energy and momentum exchange. But they also radiate and breathe while propagating. In all the cases, the smaller the interval between the two interacting beams, the stronger the mutual interaction. On the other hand, the larger the degree of incoherence, the weaker the interaction.
AB - We numerically investigate interactions between two bright or dark incoherent localized beams in a strontium barium niobate photorefractive crystal in one dimension, using the coherent density method. For the case of bright beams, if the interacting beams are in-phase, they attract each other during propagation and form bound breathers; if out-of-phase, the beams repel each other and fly away. The bright incoherent beams do not radiate much and form long-lived, well-defined breathers or quasi-stable solitons. If the phase difference is π/2, the interacting beams may both attract or repel each other, depending on the interval between the two beams, the beam widths, and the degree of coherence. For the case of dark incoherent beams, in addition to the above, the interactions also depend on the symmetry of the incident beams. As already known, an even-symmetric incident beam tends to split into a doublet, whereas an odd-symmetric incident beam tends to split into a triplet. When launched in pairs, the dark beams display dynamics consistent with such a picture and in general obey soliton-like conservation laws, so that the collisions are mostly elastic, leading to little energy and momentum exchange. But they also radiate and breathe while propagating. In all the cases, the smaller the interval between the two interacting beams, the stronger the mutual interaction. On the other hand, the larger the degree of incoherence, the weaker the interaction.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/84907529876
U2 - 10.1364/JOSAB.31.002258
DO - 10.1364/JOSAB.31.002258
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84907529876
SN - 0740-3224
VL - 31
SP - 2258
EP - 2262
JO - Journal of the Optical Society of America B: Optical Physics
JF - Journal of the Optical Society of America B: Optical Physics
IS - 10
ER -