Solitary waves in nonlinear dispersive systems with zero average dispersion
- 1 July 1998
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Physical Society (APS) in Physical Review E
- Vol. 58 (1) , R44-R47
- https://doi.org/10.1103/physreve.58.r44
Abstract
The dynamics of a solitary wave in a nonlinear lossy system with varying dispersion and periodic amplification is examined. It is demonstrated that in contrast to the traditional soliton model in which the average dispersion balances the nonlinearity, in a nonlinear system with varying dispersion, stable pulse propagation is possible even if the average dispersion is zero. As a practical example, we demonstrate dispersion-managed soliton transmission in a cascaded optical amplifier system at zero average dispersion. The possibility of transmitting a soliton with finite energy at zero dispersion (when timing jitter is suppressed) is very attractive for practical applications.Keywords
This publication has 21 references indexed in Scilit:
- Enhanced power breathing soliton in communication systems with dispersion managementPhysical Review E, 1997
- Theory of average pulse propagation in high-bit-rate optical transmission systems with strong dispersion managementJETP Letters, 1997
- Asymptotic breathing pulse in optical transmission systems with dispersion compensationPhysical Review E, 1997
- Optical pulse dynamics in fiber links with dispersion compensationOptics Communications, 1997
- Energy-scaling characteristics of solitons in strongly dispersion-managed fibersOptics Letters, 1996
- Breathing solitons in optical fiber linksJETP Letters, 1996
- Stretched-pulse additive pulse mode-locking in fiber ring lasers: theory and experimentIEEE Journal of Quantum Electronics, 1995
- Long-distance soliton propagation using lumped amplifiers and dispersion shifted fiberJournal of Lightwave Technology, 1991
- Random walk of coherently amplified solitons in optical fiber transmissionOptics Letters, 1986
- A numerical and theoretical study of certain nonlinear wave phenomenaPhilosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series A, Mathematical and Physical Sciences, 1978