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Conical refraction and nonlinearity.

R A Indik1, A C Newell

  • 1Department of Mathematics, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona 85721, USA. indik@math.arizona.edu

Optics Express
|June 17, 2009
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Nonlinearity in crystals causes modulational instability for both defocussing and focussing effects during conical refraction. Optical vortices are unaffected by this phenomenon.

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Area of Science:

  • Nonlinear optics
  • Crystal optics
  • Wave propagation

Background:

  • Conical refraction in crystals is a complex phenomenon.
  • Understanding the interplay of diffraction and nonlinearity is crucial for advanced optical applications.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate conical refraction in crystals considering both diffraction and nonlinearity.
  • To develop novel evolution equations for this system.
  • To analyze the impact of nonlinearity on beam propagation and stability.

Main Methods:

  • Development of a new set of evolution equations.
  • Analysis of beam evolution, including those with analytic singularities.
  • Examination of optical vortices in the context of conical refraction.

Main Results:

  • Nonlinearity induces modulational instability for both defocussing and focussing cases.
  • Optical vortices do not experience the effects of conical refraction.
  • New evolution equations were derived to describe the system.

Conclusions:

  • Nonlinearity plays a significant role in modulating beam stability during conical refraction.
  • The behavior of optical vortices differs from other beam types in this regime.
  • The developed equations provide a framework for further study of nonlinear optical phenomena in crystals.