Advances in Physics: X (Dec 2024)

Multidimensional soliton systems

  • Boris A. Malomed

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/23746149.2023.2301592
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 1

Abstract

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ABSTRACTThis concise review aims to provide a summary of the most relevant recent experimental and theoretical results for solitons, i.e. self-trapped bound states of nonlinear waves, in two- and three-dimensional (2D and 3D) media. In comparison with commonly known one-dimensional solitons, which are, normally, stable modes, a challenging problem is the propensity of 2D and 3D solitons to instability, caused by the occurrence of the critical or supercritical wave collapse (catastrophic self-compression) in the same spatial dimensions. A remarkable feature of multidimensional solitons is their ability to carry vorticity; however, 2D vortex rings and 3D vortex tori are subject to a strong splitting instability. Therefore, it is natural to categorize the basic results according to physically relevant settings which make it possible to stabilize fundamental (non-topological) and vortex solitons against the collapse and splitting, respectively. The present review is focused on schemes that were recently elaborated in terms of Bose-Einstein condensates and similar photonic setups. These are two-component systems with spin-orbit coupling, and ones stabilized by the beyond-mean-field Lee-Huang-Yang effect. The latter setting has been implemented experimentally, giving rise to stable self-trapped quasi-2D and 3D quantum droplets. Characteristic examples of stable three-dimensional solitons: a semi-vortex (top) and mixed-mode (bottom) modes in the binary Bose-Einstein condensate, stabilized by the spin-orbit coupling.

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