Universal dynamics and controlled switching of dissipative Kerr solitons in optical microresonators
M. Karpov, H. Guo, E. Lucas, A. Kordts, M. H. P. Pfeiffer, G., Lichachev, V. E. Lobanov, M. L. Gorodetsky, T. J. Kippenberg

TL;DR
This paper investigates the dynamics of dissipative Kerr solitons in optical microresonators, revealing a universal mechanism for deterministic soliton number reduction and providing a practical control method for stable single soliton generation.
Contribution
It introduces a novel, simple mechanism for controlled, deterministic reduction of soliton numbers in microresonators, supported by experimental and theoretical analysis across different platforms.
Findings
Discovered a universal, deterministic method to reduce soliton numbers one by one.
Mapped the multi-stability diagram of soliton states using phase modulation.
Confirmed the universality of these effects across different microresonator platforms.
Abstract
Dissipative temporal Kerr solitons in optical microresonators enable to convert a continuous wave laser into a train of femtosecond pulses. Of particular interest are single soliton states, whose spectral envelope provides a spectrally smooth and low noise optical frequency comb, and that recently have been generated in crystalline, silica, and silicon-nitride resonators. Here, we study the dynamics of multiple soliton states containing solitons and report the discovery of a novel, yet simple mechanism which makes it possible to reduce deterministically the number of solitons, one by one, i.e. . By applying weak phase modulation, we directly characterize the soliton state via a double-resonance response. The dynamical probing demonstrates that transitions occur in a predictable way, and thereby enables us to map…
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