Femtosecond polarization-structured optical field meets an anisotropic nonlinear medium

Filamentation, as a universal femtosecond phenomenon that could occur in various nonlinear systems, has aroused extensive interest, owing to its underlying physics, complexity and applicability. It is always anticipated to realize the controllable and designable filamentation. For this aim, the cruc...

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Published inOptics express Vol. 26; no. 21; pp. 27726 - 27747
Main Authors Wang, Dan, Liu, Gui-Geng, Lü, Jia-Qi, Li, Ping-Ping, Cai, Meng-Qiang, Zhang, Guan-Lin, Li, Yongnan, Tu, Chenghou, Wang, Hui-Tian
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States 15.10.2018
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Summary:Filamentation, as a universal femtosecond phenomenon that could occur in various nonlinear systems, has aroused extensive interest, owing to its underlying physics, complexity and applicability. It is always anticipated to realize the controllable and designable filamentation. For this aim, the crucial problem is how to actively break the symmetry of light-matter nonlinear interaction. A kind of extensively used approaches is based on the controllable spatial structure of optical fields involving phase, amplitude and polarization. Here we present an idea to control the optical field collapse by introducing optical anisotropy of matter as an additional degree of freedom, associated with polarization structure. Our theoretical prediction and experimental results reveal that the synergy of optical anisotropy and polarization structure is indeed a very effective means for controlling the optical field collapse, which has the robust feature against random noise.
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ISSN:1094-4087
1094-4087
DOI:10.1364/OE.26.027726