Nonlinear waves in hyperbolic metamaterials: focus on solitons and rogues

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TitreNonlinear waves in hyperbolic metamaterials: focus on solitons and rogues
Type de publicationConference Paper
Year of Publication2018
AuteursBoardman A.D, Grimalsky V.V, Guo T., Kibler B., McNiff J., Nefedov I., Rapoport Y., Argyropoulos C., Valagiannopoulos C.
EditorBoardman AD, Zayats AV, MacDonald KF
Conference NameMETAMATERIALS XI
PublisherStrasbourg Europtimist; CNRS; Investissements Avenvir; iCube; Univ Strasbourg; SPIE
Conference Location1000 20TH ST, PO BOX 10, BELLINGHAM, WA 98227-0010 USA
ISBN Number978-1-5106-1869-5
Mots-cléshyperbolic, nonlinear waves, rogues, Solitons
Résumé

The investigation of hyperbolic metamaterials, shows that metal layers that are part of graphene structures, and also types I and II layered systems, are readily controlled. Since graphene is a nicely conducting sheet it can be easily managed. The literature only reveals a, limited, systematic, approach to the onset of nonlinearity, especially for the methodology based around the famous nonlinear Schrodinger equation [NLSE]. This presentation reveals nonlinear outcomes involving solitons sustained by the popular, and more straightforward to fabricate, type II hyperbolic metamaterials. The NLSE for type II metatamaterials is developed and nonlinear, non-stationary diffraction and dispersion in such important, and active, planar hyperbolic metamaterials is developed. For rogue waves in metamaterials only a few recent numerical studies exist. The basic model assumes a uniform background to which is added a time-evolving perturbation in order to witness the growth of nonlinear waves out of nowhere. This is discussed here using a new NLSE appropriate to hyperbolic metamaterials that would normally produce temporal solitons. The main conclusion is that new pathways for rogue waves can emerge in the form of Peregrine solitons (and near-Peregrines) within a nonlinear hyperbolic metamaterial, based upon double negative guidelines, and where, potentially, magnetooptic control could be practically exerted.

DOI10.1117/12.2306937