Evidence of the universal dynamics of rogue waves
D. Pierangeli, F. Di Mei, C. Conti, E. DelRe

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that optical rogue waves exhibit the same chaotic and predictable dynamics as ocean rogue waves, supporting the idea of universal features across different physical systems.
Contribution
The paper provides the first evidence that optical rogue waves share dynamic features with ocean rogue waves, using the Grassberger-Procaccia method for analysis.
Findings
Optical rogue wave data shows chaotic and predictable behavior up to the autocorrelation length.
Long-range predictability is limited by data set size due to dynamic complexity.
Optical and ocean rogue waves share universal dynamic features.
Abstract
Light manifests extreme localized waves with long-tail statistics that seem analogous to the still little understood rogue waves in oceans, and optical setups promise to become laboratory test-beds for their investigation. However, to date there is no evidence that optical extreme events share the dynamics of their oceanic counterparts, and this greatly limits our ability to study rogue wave predictability using light. Using the Grassberger-Procaccia embedding method, we here demonstrate that optical spatial rogue wave data in photorefractive crystals has the same predictability and dynamic features of ocean rogue waves. For scales up to the autocorrelation length, a chaotic and predictable behavior emerges, whereas complexity in the dynamics causes long-range predictability to be limited by the finite size of data sets. The appearance of same dynamics validates the conjecture that…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsNonlinear Dynamics and Pattern Formation · Ocean Waves and Remote Sensing · Nonlinear Photonic Systems
