Source: https://www.nature.com/articles/srep01007?error=cookies_not_supported&code=ff38cf2f-0a0b-417e-9cee-5f25cc85ac29
Timestamp: 2019-04-25 14:52:31+00:00

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Field collapse, which occurs in various nonlinear systems, has attracted much attention, owing to its universality, complexity, and applicability. A great challenge and expectation is to achieve the controllable and designable collapsing pattern. Here we predict theoretically and demonstrate experimentally the novel collapsing behaviors of the vector optical fields in a self-focusing Kerr medium. Surprisingly, the results reveal that the collapse of the vector optical field is controllable and designable by engineering the distribution of hybrid states of polarization, and has the robust feature insensitive to the random noise. Our idea has its significance which it opens a new window for manipulating the optical field and the different kinds of field, and then facilitates to push the related researches.
Optical field will undergo collapse at the input power above a certain critical power when an intense laser field propagates in a transparent self-focusing medium1,2,3,4,5. The high intensity as the collapse exacerbates will induce other nonlinear effects, such as multiphoton and saturable absorptions, to counterbalance self-focusing, resulting ultimately in filamentation3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12. Filamentation is an interesting and important topic due to its underlying physics and practical implication in many branches of physics13,14,15,16,17,18. A great challenge and expectation is to tame the randomicity and then to realize the controllable and even designable filamentation. For this purpose, several methods have been proposed such as, controlling the input power and divergence angle19, shaping the field profile20,21, using amplitude/phase mask22,23,24,25, and introducing spatial regularization26.
Polarization, as an intrinsic and fundamental vectorial nature of light, plays an indispensable role in the interaction of light with matter. Trisorio and Hauri27 demonstrated the spatial control on two filaments using circularly polarized femtosecond laser pulses. Fibich and Ilan3,28 presented a theoretical prediction that under the nonparaxial condition solely, the vectorial (polarization) effect of the homogeneously linearly-polarized field can lead to two filaments. However, polarization and its diversity of spatial distribution are not yet utilized fully. For the field collapse and the multiple filamentation, besides the self-focusing effect which is a requirement for the propagation medium, a prerequisite is that the optical field should be axial-symmetry breaking in and of itself. Therefore, to achieve the active control for the field collapse and the multiple filamentation, the key points are that the axial-symmetry breaking must be controllable and even designable, and the randomicity must be effectively suppressed simultaneously. A question is raised that whether the state of polarization (SoP) of light, as a degree of freedom, can be used to break the axial symmetry of optical field and to then availably control the field collapse and multiple filamentation. Vector optical fields with spatially inhomogeneous SoP distribution29,30 provide indeed such an opportunity and possibility, due to the designability and diversity of SoP distribution.
In this paper, we present an idea that the axial-symmetry breaking of optical field by engineering the azimuthally-variant SoP distribution controls the collapsing filamentation. We perform, to the best of our knowledge, the first study of the collapse of the vector optical fields in a self-focusing Kerr medium. The experimental results are in excellent agreement with our theoretical prediction. Some novel features are found, including the controllable, designable and robust features. The present study can contribute further to the study of collapsing filamentation in other nonlinear systems and other kinds of fields.
An important route breaking the axial symmetry of optical field is based on the azimuthally-variant hybrid-polarized vector field (AV-HP-VF), which is a family of vector optical field with a “top-hat-like” intensity profile excluding a central singularity caused by the polarization uncertainty30. Under the weak focusing condition, the focused AV-HP-VF exhibits a uniform-intensity focal ring instead of a focal spot30. Its radially variant amplitude A(r) can be described by the generalized hypergeometric function; nevertheless, as a well approximation, A(r) can take the form of , where r0 is the radius of the focal ring. Inasmuch as the weak focusing does not change the SoP distribution, the focused AV-HP-VF in a polar coordinate system (r, ) can be written as where (m is the topological charge and is the initial phase), and and are two unit vectors indicating the horizontally and vertically polarized components, respectively. For the AV-HP-VF with m and , the local linear polarizations are located at a series of azimuthal positions , whereas local circular polarizations are at a series of (where n = 0, 1, ..., 4m−1). Differently from the optical vortex31, the AV-HP-VFs carry no orbital angular momentum though they also have a strictly zero field at the central singularity32. By contrast, an azimuthally-variant linearly-polarized vector field (AV-LP-VF) can be written as follows Compared Eq. (2) with Eq. (1), it can be found the unique difference that the horizontally and vertically polarized components have a phase difference of −π/2 for AV-HP-VF, while are in phase for AV-LP-VF.
To theoretically explore the nonlinear propagation behavior of a vector optical field in a Kerr medium, the (2+1)-dimensional vector-version nonlinear Schrödinger (NLS) equation should be used. Under the slowly varying amplitude approximation, the vector-version NLS equation can be divided into a pair of coupled NLS equations for two orthogonal horizontal and vertical components where is the nondimensional q-component normalized by the total field, . , ζ = z/Ld (Ld = πr02/λ) are the nondimensional cylindrical coordinates. is the power, PC = αλ2/4πn0n2 is the critical power for self-focusing, n0 and n2 are the linear and nonlinear refractive indices of the Kerr medium, α is a constant dependent on the initial field shape33, c is the speed of light in vacuum, and λ is the wavelength, respectively. On the right-hand side of Eq. (3), the first term represents the contribution from the diffraction described by the transverse Laplacian , and the second term is from the Kerr nonlinearity.
We performed a large number of simulations using Eq. (3) under P = 10PC in a self-focusing Kerr medium. When the spatial random noise is added in simulation, the random noise with a level of ±10% amplitude is used. The first and second rows in Fig. 1 illustrate the simulation results for the collapsing behavior of the focused AV-HP-VF (with m = 1 and ) described by Eq. (1), without and with random noise, respectively. By comparison, the third and fourth rows in Fig. 1 show the simulation results for the AV-LP-VF (with m = 1 and ) described by Eq. (2), which is the well-known radially-polarized vector field (RP-VF)29, without and with random noise. Although both AV-HP-VF and RP-VF display the same focusing ring, their nonlinear propagation behaviors are quite different. Figure 2 shows the simulated collapsing patterns of the AV-HP-VFs with m = 1 ( and π/4) and m = 2 ( and π/8) when the spatial random noise is added. Summarizing all the simulation results performed, we can draw following conclusions. For the AV-HP-VF with the given m and , (i) the azimuthally-variant hybrid SoP distribution leads to the axial-symmetry breaking; (ii) the field undergoes the collapse to converge into the deterministic filaments; (iii) the number of filaments is 4m depending solely on m; (iv) the filaments are always located at the azimuthal positions , where their local SoPs are linearly polarized; (v) the collapsing pattern exhibits a 4m-fold rotation (C4m) symmetry; and (vi) the collapsing patterns persist among simulations, with and without different random noise, implying that collapsing patterns are insensitive to noise. Meanwhile, for the AV-LP-VFs, (i) the purely ideal AV-LP-VF always remains in the axially symmetric ring, indicating that the purely ideal AV-LP-VF cannot converge to the deterministic multiple filaments; and (ii) the collapsing filaments produced by AV-LP-VF with the random noise has the uncertainty, similar with the collapses of optical vortices31 and polarization vortices34.
Figure 1: Simulated nonlinear propagation behaviors of AV-HP-VF with m = 1 and in equation (2).
The first and second rows correspond to the cases without and with random noise, respectively. For comparison, the RP-VFs without and with random noise are also shown in the third and fourth rows. The four columns (from left to right) correspond to four propagation distances (ζ = 0, 0.12, 0.24, 0.36). The SoP distributions are also shown in the first column.
Figure 2: Simulated collapsing patterns of AV-HP-VFs with different m and at a propagation distance of ζ = 0.36 with random noise.
To experimentally confirm our theoretical prediction and numerical simulations, all the required vector fields with different m and were created by using the experimental scheme30. The created AV-HP-VFs and AV-LP-VFs were weakly focused into a uniform-intensity focal ring and then incident into the CS2 cell with a length of 10 mm, by an achromatic lens with a focal length of f = 300 mm. The intensity patterns of the field transmitted from the CS2 cell are imaged on a detector (Beamview, Coherent Inc.) using an achromatic lens with a focal length of f = 60 mm. The experimental results of the AV-LP-VFs (not shown here) reveal that the number and positions of the induced collapsing filaments have the uncertainty among the experiments, depending on the spatial random fluctuation of the input field. Any one of the measured collapsing patterns of the m = 1 charge AV-HP-VFs, with four different ( = 0, π/8, π/4, 3π/8), consists of four deterministic filaments and exhibits a fourfold rotation (C4) symmetry (Fig. 3). The four patterns have no difference in nature, whereas their unique difference is that the patterns from Fig. 3a–d are rotated counterclockwisely in sequence by an angle of π/8. Figure 4 shows the measured collapsing patterns of AV-HP-VFs (with ) for m = 1, 2, 3, 4. The m-charge AV-HP-VF produces 4m deterministic filaments, where m = 1, 2, 3, 4, with the number of filaments being 4, 8, 12, 16, respectively. The collapsing pattern exhibits a 4m-fold rotation (C4m) symmetry. In particular, the positions of filaments for any AV-HP-VF always coincide with those of the local linear polarizations in the azimuthal dimension. The collapsing patterns of the AV-HP-VF with a given m and persist among experiments, implying that the collapsing patterns are indeed insensitive to the ransom noise. Moreover, the collapsing pattern of the AV-HP-VF is controllable and designable by engineering the spatial hybrid SoP structure.
Figure 3: Measured collapsing patterns of AV-HP-VFs with m = 1 for different .
(a) . (b) . (c) . (d) .
Figure 4: Measured collapsing patterns of AV-HP-VFs with for different m.
(a) m = 1. (b) m = 2. (c) m = 3. (d) m = 4.
To understand the physics behind the collapse of AV-HP-VF, a cross-coupling model is presented (Fig. 5). Multiple filamentation requires the simultaneous spatial confinements in both the radial and azimuthal dimensions. The self-confinement in the radial dimension is due to the focal ring. However, it is of great interest and of crucial importance to reveal the mechanism behind the axial symmetry breaking that leads to the multiple filamentation. Therefore, we ignore the radial terms and in the transverse Laplacian , while concentrate only on the azimuthal term in Eq. (3). The Kerr medium is divided into N equal-length thin segments (each thin segment has a normalized length of Δζ = L/N), so that the nondepletion approximation is valid within any thin segment. After the focused AV-LP-VF described in Eq. (2) passing though the 1st segment, based on Eq. (3), and can be expressed as follows thereby obtaining where and . Based on Eqs. (4) and (5), we can find: (i) the horizontal and vertical components are always held in phase, implying that spatial SoP distribution has no change; and (ii) the intensity distribution still exhibits axial symmetry. Therefore, a purely ideal AV-LP-VF can never produce the deterministic multiple filamentation, which is in excellent agreement with the simulation (the third row of Fig. 1). As such, any azimuthal position is equivalent or indistinguishable. In the presence of azimuthal perturbations, axial symmetry breaking will lead to the filamentation1,2,3,4,5 (also see the fourth row of Fig. 1).
Figure 5: Cross-coupling model for the collapse of AV-HP-VF.
(a) The intensity and SoP distributions in the input plane. (b) Those behind the first segment. (c) Those behind the nth segment. (d) Those in the output plane. Arc arrows indicates the energy exchange directions. (e) The simulated evolution of S3 of azimuthal hybrid SoPs for the AV-HP-VF with m = 1 and (only the azimuthal range from to π is shown).
After the AV-HP-VF described in Eq. (1) passing through the 1st segment, based on Eq. (3), and can be expressed as follows thereby obtaining where Equation 7 suggests that the nonlinear cross-coupling results in the energy redistribution of AV-HP-VF in the azimuthal dimension (or the axial symmetry breaking). It should be pointed out that the intensity distribution still holds the axial symmetry in the absence of nonlinearity ( ). As an example, the AV-HP-VF with m = 1 and is considered (Figs. 5a–d). In the input plane (ζ = 0), the focused AV-HP-VF has the azimuthally-invariant intensity distribution, while the azimuthally-variant hybrid SoP distribution (Fig. 5a). After the 1st segment, the cross-coupling results in the energy exchange in the azimuthal dimension toward the locations at from those at (Fig. 5b). As the propagation distance increases, more energy is transferred toward the locations at after the jth segment (Fig. 5c). In the output plane (Fig. 5d), the cross-coupling leads to the energy almost converging into the azimuthal locations at . The axial symmetry of the focused AV-HP-VF is broken ultimately to form four deterministic filaments. From Eq. 6, the cross-coupling acquires an additional phase, which makes the phase difference between the horizontal and vertical components to not always preserve π/2, resulting in the SoP evolution in contrast to AV-LP-VF. However, at two series of azimuthal locations, and , the SoPs have no change. The simulated evolution of the azimuthal-variant hybrid SoPs, by the Stokes parameter S3 characterizing the ellipticity30, during the nonlinear propagation of the AV-HP-VF with m = 1 and confirmed the above prediction (Fig. 5e). As propagation distance increases, the local ellipticity has a tendency to decrease (i.e, the local polarization ellipse will become flatter). Except for at the special azimuthal locations of and , the SoPs have indeed no change, like the above discussion from the cross-coupling model.
To understand the collapsing filaments, the azimuthal self-focusing model is also very beneficial (Fig. 6). The self-focusing phenomenon originates from the spatially variant refractive index change. In an isotropic Kerr medium under the same intensity, the induced refractive index change depends on the SoP of optical field (Δnlin > Δnell > Δncir), where Δnlin, Δnell, and Δncir are the refractive index changes induced by the linearly, elliptically, and circularly polarized light, respectively35. As a result, the refractive index change induced by the AV-HP-VF is azimuthally variant, leading to the axial-symmetry breaking. The local linear and circular polarizations are located at and (where n = 0, 1, 2, 3) for the AV-HP-VF with m = 1 and (Fig. 6a). Therefore, the induced four azimuthal self-focusing lenses have their centers located at and their edges located at (Fig. 6b). The input field undergoes the azimuthal multiple-nucleation self-focusing, making the energy converge toward the four locations at (Fig. 6c). As the propagation distance increases, the “focal lengths” of the induced azimuthal self-focusing lenses become shorter (Fig. 6d), and then the energy converges ultimately into the four deterministic filaments (Fig. 6e). In particular, Δnlin is greater than 50% Δncir, which is the reason why AV-HP-VF can suppress the random noise (the robust feature) during the deterministic collapsing filamentation.
Figure 6: Azimuthal self-focusing model for the collapse of AV-HP-VF.
(a) Input focused AV-HP-VF. (b) Induced azimuthal self-focusing lenses. (c) Axial-symmetry broken AV-HP-VF. (d) Induced azimuthal self-focusing lenses with the shorter “focal length”. (e) Collapsing filaments.
We have presented the theoretical prediction and conducted the experimental evidence on the novel collapsing behaviors of AV-HP-VF in the self-focusing Kerr medium. The azimuthally-variant hybrid SoP structure is crucial in the axial symmetry breaking. The collapsing filamentation has the controllable and robust features. The m-charge AV-HP-VF produces 4m filaments with 4m-fold rotation (C4m) symmetry. The number of multiple filaments is a function solely of m, and their locations are determined by both m and . Our results suggest that engineering the hybrid SoP structure can tame the randomicity and then realize the designable collapsing filamentation. This study only concentrated on the collapsing behavior; thus, the higher-order nonlinearity, which is important in the postcollapse process, has been neglected. Of course, we also simulated the multiple filamentation when the higher-order Kerr effect is considered, the results indicate a novel feature that the relative phase difference among the multiple filaments is stable and insensitivity to the input fluctuations of the pulse energy, which is quite different from the reported fact that the relative phase difference is instable and sensitivity to the small fluctuations of the pulse energy, i.e., loss of phase of collapse36. Our idea may offer an alternative route to produce the controllable and robust multiple filamentation in other nonlinear systems, thereby facilitating the development of additional surprising applications. This work has the great significance that it not only opens a new window for manipulating the optical field and facilitates to push the related researches, but also has a certain reference value for manipulating the different kinds of field.
We follow the same method as Ref. 30 for creating the vector fields required in this study. The used light source is a Ti:sapphire regenerative amplifier femtosecond laser system (Coherent Inc.), which provides a fundamental Gaussian mode with a central wavelength of 800 nm, a pulse duration of 35 fs, and a repetition rate of 1 kHz. An achromatic 1/2 wave plate and a broadband polarized beam splitter were used to control incident laser fluence on the sample surface. Another achromatic 1/2 wave plate was used to change the polarization direction of the incident femtosecond laser into the vector field generation unit, where all the elements are achromatic to suppress pulse broadening as much as possible. The created AV-HP-VFs and AV-HP-VFs have a “top-hat-like” spatial profile, excluding a central singularity caused by the SoP uncertainty, with a radius of 1.5 mm, a pulse energy of 6.0 μJ, and a pulse duration of ~65 fs.
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This work was supported by the 973 Program of China under Grant No. 2012CB921900, and the National Natural Science Foundation of China under Grants 10934003.
S.M. Li presented idea, performed the experiments, carried out simulations, and wrote the manuscript. Y.N. Li assisted with the experiments and the discussion of mechanism. X.L. Wang presented the method for generating the vector fields. L.J. Kong and K. Lou assisted with the experiments and the discussion. C.H. Tu provided technical support. Y.J. Tian assisted with the discussion of mechanism and wrote the manuscript. H.T. Wang planned the project, presented the idea and the mechanism, guided and supervised the simulations and experiments, and wrote the manuscript.

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