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Routing of anisotropic spatial solitons and modulational instability in liquid crystals

Authors :
Marco Peccianti
Antonio De Luca
Gaetano Assanto
Claudio Conti
Cesare Umeton
M., Peccianti
C., Conti
Assanto, Gaetano
A., DE LUCA
C., Umeton
Source :
Nature. 432:733-737
Publication Year :
2004
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2004.

Abstract

In certain materials, the spontaneous spreading of a laser beam (owing to diffraction) can be compensated for by the interplay of optical intensity and material nonlinearity. The resulting non-diffracting beams are called ‘spatial solitons’ (refs 1–3), and they have been observed in various bulk media4,5,6. In nematic liquid crystals7,8,9, solitons can be produced at milliwatt power levels10,11,12 and have been investigated for both practical applications13 and as a means of exploring fundamental aspects of light interactions with soft matter14,15. Spatial solitons effectively operate as waveguides, and so can be considered as a means of channelling optical information along the self-sustaining filament. But actual steering of these solitons within the medium has proved more problematic, being limited to tilts of just a fraction of a degree16,17,18,19,20. Here we report the results of an experimental and theoretical investigation of voltage-controlled ‘walk-off’ and steering of self-localized light in nematic liquid crystals. We find not only that the propagation direction of individual spatial solitons can be tuned by several degrees, but also that an array of direction-tunable solitons can be generated by modulation instability21,22,23,24,25. Such control capabilities might find application in reconfigurable optical interconnects, optical tweezers and optical surgical techniques.

Details

ISSN :
14764687 and 00280836
Volume :
432
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....30c3be258d5e0369dc4b742282519d37
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/nature03101