Soliton-induced nonlocal resonances observed through high-intensity tunable spectrally compressed second-harmonic peaks
read the original abstract
Experimental data of femtosecond thick-crystal second-harmonic generation shows that when tuning away from phase matching, a dominating narrow spectral peak appears in the second harmonic that can be tuned over 100's of nm by changing the phase-mismatch parameter. Traditional theory explains this as phase matching between a sideband in the broadband pump to its second-harmonic. However, our experiment is conducted under high input intensities and instead shows excellent quantitative agreement with a nonlocal theory describing cascaded quadratic nonlinearities. This theory explains the detuned peak as a nonlocal resonance that arises due to phase-matching between the pump and a detuned second-harmonic frequency, but where in contrast to the traditional theory the pump is assumed dispersion-free. As a soliton is inherently dispersion-free, the agreement between our experiment and the nonlocal theory indirectly proves that we have observed a soliton-induced nonlocal resonance. The soliton exists in the self-defocusing regime of the cascaded nonlinear interaction and in the normal dispersion regime of the crystal, and needs high input intensities to become excited.
This paper has not been read by Pith yet.
discussion (0)
Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.