Shaping is very necessary in order to obtain a wide and flat supercontinuum (SC). Via numerical simulations, we accurately demonstrated shaping the SC using the fiber cascading method to significantly increase the width as well as the flatness of the spectrum in silica photonic crystal fiber (PCF). The cascaded PCF contains two segments, each of which has dual zero-dispersion frequencies (ZDFs). The spectral range of the SC can be expanded tremendously by tuning the spacing between the two ZDFs of the first segmented cascaded PCF. Increasing the pump power generates more solitons at the red edge, which accelerates solitons trapping and improves the spectral flatness of the blue edge. Furthermore, cascading the second segmented PCF by choosing appropriate fiber parameters ensures the flatness of the red end of SC. Therefore, a cost-effective alternative method for broad and flat supercontinuum generation in the near-infrared range is proposed here, which can be implemented easily in any photonics laboratory, where dual ZDFs PCFs are commonly found.
We demonstrate manipulating the interactions of a second-order soliton with a weak probe pulse under the condition of group velocity match and group velocity mismatch (GVMM). During these interactions, the second-order soliton acting as an effective periodic refractive-index barrier leads to the polychromatic scattering of the probe pulse, which is represented as unequally spaced narrow-band sources with adjustable spectral width. In the case of GVMM, almost all the spectral components of the narrow-band sources meet the nonlinear frequency conversion relationship by using the wavenumbermatching relationship due to the robustness of the second-order soliton under moderate high-order-dispersion perturbations, so this case is more conducive to the study of the soliton wells. In addition, different transmission states of a soliton well are demonstrated under different probe pulse properties in the fiber-optical analog of the event horizon. When the power of the probe pulse is strong enough, a dispersive wave can be generated from the collision of two fundamental solitons split from the two second-order solitons. These interesting phenomena investigated in this work as a combination of white-and black-hole horizons can be considered as promising candidates for frequency conversion and broadband supercontinuum generation.
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