Parametrically driven Kerr cavity solitons
Abstract
Temporal cavity solitons are optical pulses that propagate indefinitely in nonlinear resonators. They are currently attracting a lot of attention, both for their many potential applications and for their connection to other fields of science. Cavity solitons are phase locked to a driving laser. This is what distinguishes them from laser dissipative solitons and the main reason why they are excellent candidates for precision applications such as optical atomic clocks. To date, the focus has been on driving Kerr solitons close to their carrier frequency, in which case a single stable localised solution exists for fixed parameters. Here we experimentally demonstrate, for the first time, Kerr cavity solitons excitation around twice their carrier frequency. In that configuration, called parametric driving, two solitons of opposite phase may coexist. We use a fibre resonator that incorporates a quadratically nonlinear section and excite stable solitons by scanning the driving frequency. Our experimental results are in excellent agreement with a seminal amplitude equation, highlighting connections to hydrodynamic and mechanical systems, amongst others. Furthermore, we experimentally confirm that two different phase-locked solitons may be simultaneously excited and harness this multiplicity to generate a string of random bits, thereby extending the pool of applications of Kerr resonators to random number generators and Ising machines.
Cite
@article{arxiv.2101.07784,
title = {Parametrically driven Kerr cavity solitons},
author = {Nicolas Englebert and Francesco De Lucia and Pedro Parra-Rivas and Carlos Mas Arabí and Pier-John Sazio and Simon-Pierre Gorza and François Leo},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2101.07784},
year = {2021}
}