Loughborough University
Browse

Singular and regular gap solitons between three dispersion curves

Download (777.46 kB)
journal contribution
posted on 2006-01-25, 18:14 authored by Roger Grimshaw, Boris A. Malomed, Georg A. Gottwald
A general model is introduced to describe a wave-envelope system for the situation when the linear dispersion relation has three branches, which in the absence of any coupling terms between these branches, would intersect pairwise in three nearly coincident points. The system contains two waves with a strong linear coupling between them, to which a third wave is then coupled. This model has two gaps in its linear spectrum. As is typical for wave-envelope systems, the model also contains a set of cubic nonlinear terms. Realizations of this model can be made in terms of temporal or spatial evolution of optical fields in, respectively, either a planar waveguide, or a bulk-layered medium resembling a photonic-crystal fiber, which carry a triple spatial Bragg grating. Another physical system described by the same general model is a set of three internal wave modes in a density-stratified fluid, whose phase speeds come into close coincidence for a certain wave number. A nonlinear analysis is performed for zero-velocity solitons, that is, they have zero velocity in the reference frame in which the third wave has zero group velocity. If one may disregard the self-phase modulation (SPM) term in the equation for the third wave, we find an analytical solution which shows that there simultaneously exist two different families of solitons: regular ones, which may be regarded as a smooth deformation of the usual gap solitons in a two-wave system, and cuspons, which have finite amplitude and energy, but a singularity in the first derivative at their center. Even in the limit when the linear coupling of the third wave to the first two nearly vanishes, the soliton family remains drastically different from that in the uncoupled system; in this limit, regular solitons whose amplitude exceeds a certain critical value are replaced by peakons (whose first derivative is finite at the center, but jumps in value). While the regular solitons, cuspons, and peakons are found in an exact analytical form, their stability is tested numerically, which shows that they all may be stable. If the SPM terms are retained, we find that there may again simultaneously exist two different families of generic stable soliton solutions, namely, regular ones and peakons. Direct simulations show that both types of solitons are stable in this case.

History

School

  • Science

Department

  • Mathematical Sciences

Pages

796120 bytes

Citation

GRIMSHAW, R., MALOMED, B.A. and GOTTWALD, G.A., 2002. Singular and regular gap solitons between three dispersion curves. Phys. Rev. E 65, 066606, 14 pp.

Publisher

© The American Physical Society

Publication date

2002

Notes

This is article was submitted for publication in the journal Physical Review E [© The American Physical Society]. The definitive version is available at: http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevE.65.066606

Language

  • en

Usage metrics

    Loughborough Publications

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC