Extreme (Rogue) Waves: From Theory to Experiments in Ultracold Gases and Beyond
A. Chabchoub, P. Engels, P. G. Kevrekidis, S. I. Mistakidis, G. C. Katsimiga, M. E. Mossman, S. Mossman

TL;DR
This paper reviews theoretical and experimental progress in understanding rogue waves in ultracold quantum gases, highlighting their controllable emergence, experimental realization, and broader physical relevance.
Contribution
It introduces new insights into rogue wave formation in non-integrable quantum systems and summarizes recent experimental techniques for observing these phenomena in ultracold gases.
Findings
First experimental observation of Peregrine soliton in ultracold gases
Demonstration of rogue wave generation via modulational instability
Control of rogue wave dynamics in non-integrable quantum systems
Abstract
In this Chapter, we review key theoretical and experimental advances in the study of extreme nonlinear wave events, called rogue waves (RWs), in both single-component attractively interacting and two-component repulsive mixtures of ultracold quantum gases. Starting from the exact rational solutions of the integrable focusing nonlinear Schroedinger model, the hierarchy of RW solutions is exemplified. These range from the Peregrine soliton (PS) and, related to it, the destabilization into a multi-peak cascade of PSs dubbed "Christmas-tree", to the Akhmediev breather, and Kuznetsov-Ma soliton as well as higher-order RWs. Emphasis is placed on their controllable dynamical emergence and characteristics in non-integrable quantum many-body systems described by Gross-Pitaevskii models and extensions thereof through different protocols such as modulational instability, gradient catastrophe, and…
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