(2+1)-dimensional soliton formation in photorefractive Bi12SiO20 crystals

E. Fazio, W. Ramadan, A. Belardini, A. Bosco, M. Bertolotti, A. Petris, and V. I. Vlad
Phys. Rev. E 67, 026611 – Published 26 February 2003
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Abstract

(2+1)-dimensional spatial solitons in Bi12SiO20 (BSO) photorefractive crystals with large optical activity are experimentally demonstrated. The soliton formation when a Gaussian beam is injected at the input has been previously analyzed numerically and then experimentally investigated. We demonstrate analytically, numerically, and experimentally that by applying static electric biases of high values, the polarization rotation accelerates: this acceleration prevents the beam from broadening if the polarization rotation period becomes shorter than the diffraction length. Contemporary to this nonlinear optical activity, an induced birefringence affects the beam polarization state. Analysis of the polarization dynamics shows that the polarization changes nonuniformly across the beam (with a field dependent speed) until about 30–35 kV/cm; above this limit, the whole beam has just one polarization state. Representation on the Poincaré sphere of the polarization dynamics reveals the existence of a stable polarization trajectory closed around a polarization attractor that depends on the linear optical activity and on the photorefractive nonlinearity. The experimental soliton is well described by the analytical solutions already obtained [Fazio et al., Phys. Rev. E 66, 016605 (2002)].

  • Received 24 May 2002

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevE.67.026611

©2003 American Physical Society

Authors & Affiliations

E. Fazio, W. Ramadan*, A. Belardini, A. Bosco, and M. Bertolotti

  • Università degli Studi di Roma “La Sapienza” and INFM Dipartimento di Energetica, via Scarpa 16, I-00161 Roma, Italy

A. Petris and V. I. Vlad

  • Institute of Atomic Physics, National Institute of Lasers, Plasma and Radiation Physics, and The Romanian Academy— Center of Advanced Studies in Physics, Atomistii 111, R-76900 Bucharest, Romania

  • *On leave from Faculty of Sciences, University of Mansoura, Damietta, Egypt.

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Vol. 67, Iss. 2 — February 2003

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