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Self-emergence of robust solitons in a microcavity.

Maxwell RowleyPierre-Henry HanzardAntonio CutronaHualong BaoSai Tek ChuBrent E LittleRoberto MorandottiDavid J MossGian-Luca OppoJuan Sebastian Totero GongoraMarco PecciantiAlessia Pasquazi
Published in: Nature (2022)
In many disciplines, states that emerge in open systems far from equilibrium are determined by a few global parameters 1,2 . These states can often mimic thermodynamic equilibrium, a classic example being the oscillation threshold of a laser 3 that resembles a phase transition in condensed matter. However, many classes of states cannot form spontaneously in dissipative systems, and this is the case for cavity solitons 2 that generally need to be induced by external perturbations, as in the case of optical memories 4,5 . In the past decade, these highly localized states have enabled important advancements in microresonator-based optical frequency combs 6,7 . However, the very advantages that make cavity solitons attractive for memories-their inability to form spontaneously from noise-have created fundamental challenges. As sources, microcombs require spontaneous and reliable initiation into a desired state that is intrinsically robust 8-20 . Here we show that the slow non-linearities of a free-running microresonator-filtered fibre laser 21 can transform temporal cavity solitons into the system's dominant attractor. This phenomenon leads to reliable self-starting oscillation of microcavity solitons that are naturally robust to perturbations, recovering spontaneously even after complete disruption. These emerge repeatably and controllably into a large region of the global system parameter space in which specific states, highly stable over long timeframes, can be achieved.
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