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Solitons are shape preserving waveforms that are ubiquitous across nonlinear dynamical systems and fall into two separate classes, that of bright solitons, formed in the anomalous group velocity dispersion regime, and `dark solitons in the normal dispersion regime. Both types of soliton have been observed in BEC, hydrodynamics, polaritons, and mode locked lasers, but have been particularly relevant to the generation of chipscale microresonator-based frequency combs (microcombs), used in numerous system level applications in timing, spectroscopy, and communications. For microcombs, both bright solitons, and alternatively dark pulses based on interlocking switching waves, have been studied. Yet, the existence of localized dissipative structures that fit between this dichotomy has been theoretically predicted, but proven experimentally elusive. Here we report the discovery of dissipative structures that embody a hybrid between switching waves and dissipative solitons, existing in the regime of (nearly) vanishing group velocity dispersion where third-order dispersion is dominant, hence termed as `zero-dispersion solitons. These dissipative structures are formed via collapsing switching wave fronts, forming clusters of quantized solitonic sub-structures. The switching waves are formed directly via synchronous pulse-driving of a photonic chip-based Si3N4 microresonator. The resulting frequency comb spectrum is extremely broad in both the switching wave and zero-dispersion soliton regime, reaching 136 THz or 97% of an octave. Fourth-order dispersion engineering results in dual-dispersive wave formation, and a novel quasi-phase matched wave related to Faraday instability. This exotic unanticipated dissipative structure expands the domain of Kerr cavity physics to the regime near zero-dispersion and could present a superior alternative to conventional solitons for broadband comb generation.
This chapter describes the discovery and stable generation of temporal dissipative Kerr solitons in continuous-wave (CW) laser driven optical microresonators. The experimental signatures as well as the temporal and spectral characteristics of this cl
We present the results of asymptotic and numerical analysis of dissipative Kerr solitons in whispering gallery mode microresonators influenced by higher order dispersive terms leading to the appearance of a dispersive wave (Cherenkov radiation). Comb
Dissipative solitons are self-localized structures resulting from a double balance between dispersion and nonlinearity as well as dissipation and a driving force. They occur in a wide variety of fields ranging from optics, hydrodynamics to chemistry
The Kerr effect in optical microresonators plays an important role for integrated photonic devices and enables third harmonic generation, four-wave mixing, and the generation of microresonator-based frequency combs. Here we experimentally demonstrate
Dissipative Kerr cavity solitons (CSs) are persisting pulses of light that manifest themselves in driven optical resonators and that have attracted significant attention over the last decade. Whilst the vast majority of studies have revolved around c