TY - JOUR
T1 - Resonant quasiperiodic patterns in a three-dimensional lasing medium
AU - Komarova, Natalia L.
AU - Malomed, Boris A.
AU - Moloney, J. V.
AU - Newell, Alan C.
PY - 1997
Y1 - 1997
N2 - Starting from the Maxwell-Bloch equations for a three-dimensional (3D) ring-cavity laser, we analyze stability of the nonlasing state and demonstrate that, at the instability threshold, the wave vectors of the critical perturbations belong to a paraboloid in the 3D space. Then, we derive a system of nonlinear evolution equations above the threshold. The nonlinearity in these equations is cubic. For certain sets of four spatial modes whose vectors belong to the critical paraboloid, the cubic nonlinearity gives rise to a resonant coupling between them. This is a nontrivial example of a nonlinear dissipative system in which the cubic terms are resonant. The equations for the four coupled amplitudes have two different solutions that are simultaneously stable: the single-mode one and a solution in which all the amplitudes are equal, while a certain combination of the phases is [Formula Presented]. The latter solution gives rise to a quasiperiodic pattern in the infinite 3D cavity. We also consider effects of the boundary conditions and demonstrate that if the cavity’s cross section is a trapezium it may support the quasiperiodic four-mode state rather than suppressing it. Using the Lyapunov function, we find that for the ring-laser configuration the four-mode state is metastable. However, we demonstrate that for a Fabry-Pérot cavity, where diffusion washes out the standing-wave grating, this state is absolutely stable. We also consider a number of more complicated patterns. We demonstrate that adding a pair of resonant vectors, or any number of nonresonant ones, always produces an unstable solution. A set containing several resonant quartets without resonant coupling between them may be stable, but it is less energetically favorable than a single quartet.
AB - Starting from the Maxwell-Bloch equations for a three-dimensional (3D) ring-cavity laser, we analyze stability of the nonlasing state and demonstrate that, at the instability threshold, the wave vectors of the critical perturbations belong to a paraboloid in the 3D space. Then, we derive a system of nonlinear evolution equations above the threshold. The nonlinearity in these equations is cubic. For certain sets of four spatial modes whose vectors belong to the critical paraboloid, the cubic nonlinearity gives rise to a resonant coupling between them. This is a nontrivial example of a nonlinear dissipative system in which the cubic terms are resonant. The equations for the four coupled amplitudes have two different solutions that are simultaneously stable: the single-mode one and a solution in which all the amplitudes are equal, while a certain combination of the phases is [Formula Presented]. The latter solution gives rise to a quasiperiodic pattern in the infinite 3D cavity. We also consider effects of the boundary conditions and demonstrate that if the cavity’s cross section is a trapezium it may support the quasiperiodic four-mode state rather than suppressing it. Using the Lyapunov function, we find that for the ring-laser configuration the four-mode state is metastable. However, we demonstrate that for a Fabry-Pérot cavity, where diffusion washes out the standing-wave grating, this state is absolutely stable. We also consider a number of more complicated patterns. We demonstrate that adding a pair of resonant vectors, or any number of nonresonant ones, always produces an unstable solution. A set containing several resonant quartets without resonant coupling between them may be stable, but it is less energetically favorable than a single quartet.
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U2 - 10.1103/PhysRevA.56.803
DO - 10.1103/PhysRevA.56.803
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:0346756369
SN - 1050-2947
VL - 56
SP - 803
EP - 812
JO - Physical Review A - Atomic, Molecular, and Optical Physics
JF - Physical Review A - Atomic, Molecular, and Optical Physics
IS - 1
ER -