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Emergent rogue wave structures and statistics in spontaneous modulation instability.

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TLDR
Numerical simulations compare the properties of a large ensemble of emergent peaks in noise-seeded MI with the known analytic solutions of the NLSE to suggest that the widely-held view that the Peregrine soliton forms a rogue wave prototype must be revisited.
Abstract
The nonlinear Schrodinger equation (NLSE) is a seminal equation of nonlinear physics describing wave packet evolution in weakly-nonlinear dispersive media. The NLSE is especially important in understanding how high amplitude “rogue waves” emerge from noise through the process of modulation instability (MI) whereby a perturbation on an initial plane wave can evolve into strongly-localised “breather” or “soliton on finite background (SFB)” structures. Although there has been much study of such structures excited under controlled conditions, there remains the open question of how closely the analytic solutions of the NLSE actually model localised structures emerging in noise-seeded MI. We address this question here using numerical simulations to compare the properties of a large ensemble of emergent peaks in noise-seeded MI with the known analytic solutions of the NLSE. Our results show that both elementary breather and higher-order SFB structures are observed in chaotic MI, with the characteristics of the noise-induced peaks clustering closely around analytic NLSE predictions. A significant conclusion of our work is to suggest that the widely-held view that the Peregrine soliton forms a rogue wave prototype must be revisited. Rather, we confirm earlier suggestions that NLSE rogue waves are most appropriately identified as collisions between elementary SFB solutions.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Roadmap on optical rogue waves and extreme events

TL;DR: The concept of optical rogue wave was introduced by Solli et al. as discussed by the authors, who defined it as "an optical pulse whose amplitude or intensity is much higher than that of the surrounding pulses".
Journal ArticleDOI

Single-shot observation of optical rogue waves in integrable turbulence using time microscopy.

TL;DR: The central role played by ‘breather-like' structures such as the Peregrine soliton in the emergence of heavy-tailed statistics in integrable turbulence is demonstrated and temporal ‘snapshots' of random light are reported using a specially designed ‘time-microscope'.
Journal ArticleDOI

Rogue waves and analogies in optics and oceanography

TL;DR: A review of the work in hydrodynamics includes results that support both nonlinear and linear interpretations of rogue wave formation in the ocean, and in optics, also provide an overview of the emerging area of research applying the measurement techniques developed for the study of rogue waves to dissipative soliton systems as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

Integrable Turbulence and Rogue Waves: Breathers or Solitons?

TL;DR: Recent numerical and experimental data suggest that the probability of the appearance of rogue waves in a chaotic wave state in such systems increases when the initial state is a random function of sufficiently high amplitude.
Journal ArticleDOI

Real-time measurements of spontaneous breathers and rogue wave events in optical fibre modulation instability

TL;DR: Real-time measurements are performed in an optical fibre system of the unstable breakup of a continuous wave field, simultaneously characterizing emergent modulation instability breather pulses and their associated statistics, which allow quantitative comparison between experiment, modelling and theory.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Optical rogue waves

TL;DR: This work reports the observation of rogue waves in an optical system, based on a microstructured optical fibre, near the threshold of soliton-fission supercontinuum generation—a noise-sensitive nonlinear process in which extremely broadband radiation is generated from a narrowband input.
Journal ArticleDOI

The disintegration of wave trains on deep water Part 1. Theory

TL;DR: In this paper, a theoretical analysis of the stability of periodic wave trains to small disturbances in the form of a pair of side-band modes is presented, where the wave train becomes highly irregular far from its origin, even when the departures from periodicity are scarcely detectable at the start.
Journal ArticleDOI

Water waves, nonlinear Schrödinger equations and their solutions

TL;DR: In this article, a number of ases in which these equations reduce to a one dimensional nonlinear Schrodinger (NLS) equation are enumerated, and several analytical solutions of NLS equations are presented, with discussion of their implications for describing the propagation of water waves.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Peregrine soliton in nonlinear fibre optics

TL;DR: The Peregrine soliton was observed experimentally for the first time by using femtosecond pulses in an optical fiber as mentioned in this paper, which gave some insight into freak waves that can appear out of nowhere before simply disappearing.
Book

Frequency-Resolved Optical Gating: The Measurement of Ultrashort Laser Pulses

Rick Trebino
TL;DR: The Future of Pulse Measurement: New Dilemmas, the Autocorrelation, the Spectrum and Phase Retrieval, and the FROG Algorithm.
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