The flow of light in nonlinear media can be considered as superfluid flow and described with quantum hydrodynamics. Here the authors demonstrate superfluid flow, optical rarefaction (retracting piston) and shock (pushing piston) wave pairs and characterize associated phase transitions by using fiber-based platform.Light flow in nonlinear media can exhibit quantum hydrodynamical features which are profoundly different from those of classical fluids. Here, we show that a rather extreme regime of quantum hydrodynamics can be accessed by exploring the piston problem (a paradigm in gas dynamics) for light, and its generalization, named after the celebrated mathematician Riemann, where the piston acts on a concomitant abrupt change of photon density. Our experiment reveals regimes featuring optical rarefaction (retracting piston) or shock (pushing piston) wave pairs, and most importantly the transition to a peculiar type of flow, occurring above a precise critical piston velocity, where the light shocks are smoothly interconnected by a large contrast, periodic, fully nonlinear wave. The transition to such extreme hydrodynamic state is generic for superfluids, but to date remained elusive to any other quantum fluid system. Our full-fiber setup used to observe this phenomenon in temporal domain proves to be a versatile alternative to other platforms currently employed to investigate the hydrodynamical properties of quantum fluids of light.

The piston Riemann problem in a photon superfluid

Trillo, Stefano
2022

Abstract

The flow of light in nonlinear media can be considered as superfluid flow and described with quantum hydrodynamics. Here the authors demonstrate superfluid flow, optical rarefaction (retracting piston) and shock (pushing piston) wave pairs and characterize associated phase transitions by using fiber-based platform.Light flow in nonlinear media can exhibit quantum hydrodynamical features which are profoundly different from those of classical fluids. Here, we show that a rather extreme regime of quantum hydrodynamics can be accessed by exploring the piston problem (a paradigm in gas dynamics) for light, and its generalization, named after the celebrated mathematician Riemann, where the piston acts on a concomitant abrupt change of photon density. Our experiment reveals regimes featuring optical rarefaction (retracting piston) or shock (pushing piston) wave pairs, and most importantly the transition to a peculiar type of flow, occurring above a precise critical piston velocity, where the light shocks are smoothly interconnected by a large contrast, periodic, fully nonlinear wave. The transition to such extreme hydrodynamic state is generic for superfluids, but to date remained elusive to any other quantum fluid system. Our full-fiber setup used to observe this phenomenon in temporal domain proves to be a versatile alternative to other platforms currently employed to investigate the hydrodynamical properties of quantum fluids of light.
2022
Bendahmane, Abdelkrim; Xu, Gang; Conforti, Matteo; Kudlinski, Alexandre; Mussot, Arnaud; Trillo, Stefano
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11392/2504336
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