| Literature DB >> 27001128 |
F Marino1,2, C Maitland3, D Vocke3, A Ortolan4, D Faccio3.
Abstract
Nonlinear waves in defocusing media are investigated in the framework of the hydrodynamic description of light as a photon fluid. The observations are interpreted in terms of an emergent curved spacetime generated by the waves themselves, which fully determines their dynamics. The spacetime geometry emerges naturally as a result of the nonlinear interaction between the waves and the self-induced background flow. In particular, as observed in real fluids, different points of the wave profile propagate at different velocities leading to the self-steepening of the wave front and to the formation of a shock. This phenomenon can be associated to a curvature singularity of the emergent metric. Our analysis offers an alternative insight into the problem of shock formation and provides a demonstration of an analogue gravity model that goes beyond the kinematic level.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27001128 PMCID: PMC4802342 DOI: 10.1038/srep23282
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Numerical results: probe beam evolution in the presence of a flat-top pump beam obtained by numerical integration of Eq. (1).
(a) (σ = 0) A weak probe beam (1% of the pump power, 0.02 deg input angle) splits into two beams corresponding to two Bogoliubov particles or density waves in the fluid propagating in opposite directions. (b) (σ = 0) At high probe intensities (same power as the pump) the density waves propagate nonlinearly and develop (supersonic) shock fronts that form ripples on the leading edges. (c) lineouts taken from (b): dashed line - input profile of the density wave. Thick solid line - density wave at z = 18 cm. Thin solid line - density wave at z = 18 cm for a nonlocal medium with nonlocal length σ = 110 μm. (d) Sound velocity, c, in the photon fluid (black line) and fluid flow speed (blue line - positive direction speed, dashed red line - negative direction speed).
Figure 2Experimental results.
(a) experimental layout. (b) measured density wave profile after spatial filtering for low powers (I = 0.02 W/cm2, linear density wave propagation) and high power (I = 1 W/cm2, nonlinear propagation). (c) Numerical simulation under the same conditions of the experiment, including also the nonlocal medium response, with nonlocal length σ = 110 μm.
Figure 3Numerical results.
Trajectories of points with the same density generated by the right-moving high amplitude density wave shown in Fig. 1(c).