Anisotropic Optical Shock Waves in Isotropic Media with Giant Nonlocal Nonlinearity

Giulia Marcucci, Xubo Hu, Phillip Cala, Weining Man, Davide Pierangeli, Claudio Conti, and Zhigang Chen
Phys. Rev. Lett. 125, 243902 – Published 10 December 2020
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Abstract

Dispersive shock waves in thermal optical media are nonlinear phenomena whose intrinsic irreversibility is described by time asymmetric quantum mechanics. Recent studies demonstrated that the nonlocal wave breaking evolves in an exponentially decaying dynamics ruled by the reversed harmonic oscillator, namely, the simplest irreversible quantum system in the rigged Hilbert spaces. The generalization of this theory to more complex scenarios is still an open question. In this work, we use a thermal third-order medium with an unprecedented giant Kerr coefficient, the m-cresol/nylon mixed solution, to access an extremely nonlinear, highly nonlocal regime and realize anisotropic shock waves with internal gaps. We compare our experimental observations to results obtained under similar conditions but in hemoglobin solutions from human red blood cells, and found that the gap formation strongly depends on the nonlinearity strength. We prove that a superposition of Gamow vectors in an ad hoc rigged Hilbert space, that is, a tensorial product between the reversed and the standard harmonic oscillators spaces, describes the beam propagation beyond the shock point. The anisotropy turns out from the interaction of trapping and antitrapping potentials. Our work furnishes the description of novel intriguing shock phenomena mediated by extreme nonlinearities.

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  • Received 10 September 2019
  • Revised 5 September 2020
  • Accepted 27 October 2020

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.125.243902

© 2020 American Physical Society

Physics Subject Headings (PhySH)

Nonlinear DynamicsAtomic, Molecular & Optical

Authors & Affiliations

Giulia Marcucci1,2,*, Xubo Hu3,4, Phillip Cala3, Weining Man3, Davide Pierangeli1,2, Claudio Conti2,1,5, and Zhigang Chen3,5,†

  • 1Department of Physics, Sapienza University, P.le Aldo Moro 2, 00185 Rome, Italy
  • 2Institute for Complex Systems, Via dei Taurini 19, 00185 Rome, Italy
  • 3Department of Physics and Astronomy, San Francisco State University, San Francisco, California 94132, USA
  • 4College of Electronics Engineering, South China Agricultural University, Guangzhou 510642, China
  • 5TEDA Applied Physics Institute and School of Physics, Nankai University, Tianjin 300457, China

  • *Corresponding author. gmarcucc@uottawa.ca
  • Corresponding author. zhigang@sfsu.edu

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Issue

Vol. 125, Iss. 24 — 11 December 2020

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