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Article

Optical Solitons for a Concatenation Model by Trial Equation Approach

1
Department of Mathematics, Northeast Petroleum University, Daqing 163318, China
2
Department of Mathematics and Physics, Grambling State University, Grambling, LA 71245, USA
3
Mathematical Modeling and Applied Computation (MMAC) Research Group, Department of Mathematics, King Abdulaziz University, Jeddah 21589, Saudi Arabia
4
Department of Applied Mathematics, National Research Nuclear University, 31 Kashirskoe Hwy, Moscow 115409, Russia
5
Department of Applied Sciences, Cross–Border Faculty of Humanities, Economics and Engineering, Dunarea de Jos University of Galati, 111 Domneasca Street, 800201 Galati, Romania
6
Department of Mathematics and Applied Mathematics, Sefako Makgatho Health Sciences University, Medunsa 0204, South Africa
7
Department of Computer Engineering, Biruni University, Istanbul 34010, Turkey
8
Department of Chemistry, Physics and Environment, Faculty of Sciences and Environment, Dunarea de Jos University of Galati, 47 Domneasca Street, 800008 Galati, Romania
9
Department of Computer Science and Information Technology, Faculty of Automation, Computers, Electrical Engineering and Electronics, Dunarea de Jos University of Galati, 47 Domneasca Street, 800008 Galati, Romania
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Electronics 2023, 12(1), 19; https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics12010019
Submission received: 20 November 2022 / Revised: 10 December 2022 / Accepted: 17 December 2022 / Published: 21 December 2022
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Recent Advances in Integrated Photonic Devices)

Abstract

:
This paper addresses the newly proposed concatenation model by the usage of trial equation approach. The concatenation is a chain model that is a combination of the nonlinear Schrodinger’s equation, Lakshmanan–Porsezian–Daniel model as well as the Sasa–Satsuma equation. The recovered solutions are displayed in terms of dark solitons, singular solitons, cnoidal waves and singular periodic waves. The trial equation approach enables to recover a wide spectrum of solutions to the governing model. The numerical schemes give a visual perspective to the solutions derived analytically.

1. Introduction

The dynamics of optical solitons has been sustained for half a century since its first inception in 1973. There are enumerable advances to soliton science, especially in the field of optoelectronics and telecommunications engineering [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10]. There are several forms of solitons that have been addressed in this context in the field of quantum optics. They are non-Kerr law solitons, dispersion-managed solitons, quiescent solitons and many others. While several governing models exist to study the propagation of solitons through optical fibers, a new trend is to concatenate some of the pre-existing models to establish novel models that would govern the dynamics of soliton propagation across inter-continental distances. A first attempt was proposed during 2014 as a concatenation of the pre-existing nonlinear Schrodinger’s equation (NLSE), Lakshmanan–Porsezian–Daniel (LPD) model and the Sasa–Satsuma (SS) equation [1,2]. This gave way to the newly proposed concatenation model [1,2,3,4,5].
This concatenation model has been studied earlier, where many of its other features have been addressed. These include Painleve analysis [5], conservation laws [4], undetermined coefficients [4], reduction to ordinary differential equations by traveling wave hypothesis [3] and other such analytical methodologies. The numerical issues have also been addressed where bright and dark solitons have been recovered numerically by the application of the Laplace–Adomian decomposition scheme [10]. The rogue wave solutions have also been addressed earlier [2]. The current paper gives a fresher perspective to the model by the aid of trial equation approach where new solutions in terms of cnoidal waves and singular periodic solutions are enumerated. The numerical scheme and the surface plots of such solutions are also illustrated.

Governing Model

i q t + a q x x + b | q | 2 q + c 1 [ δ 1 q x x x x + δ 2 ( q x ) 2 q * + δ 3 | q x | 2 q + δ 4 | q | 2 q x x + δ 5 q 2 q x x * + δ 6 | q | 4 q ] + i c 2 [ δ 7 q x x x + δ 8 | q | 2 q x + δ 9 q 2 q x * ] = 0 ,
where q = q ( x , t ) purports the wave profile, while x and t stand for the spatial and temporal variables in sequence. The first term signifies the linear temporal evolution, while a comes from the chromatic dispersion. c 1 and c 2 yield the dispersion terms, while b gives the Kerr of nonlinearity. Setting c 1 = c 2 = 0 reduces (1) to the NLSE, while taking c 2 = 0 decreases (1) to the LPD model. Additionally, setting c 1 = 0 simplifies (1) to the Sasa–Satsuma (SS) equation.
The novelty of the model is truly unique. This is a combination of three well-known models that describe the soliton propagation dynamics through optical fibers across intercontinental distances. Thus, the model is triply beneficial. With c 1 = c 2 = 0 , the model is purely NLSE that describes the soliton propagation across inter-continental distances. However, with c 1 0 and c 2 = 0 , the dynamics of the propagation of dispersive solitons is modeled and with c 1 = 0 and c 2 0 , we have the Sasa–Satsuma equation that governs the perturbed soliton propagation with third–order dispersion and self-frequency shift. Thus, the current model with c 1 0 and c 2 0 , is unique in the sense that all of the perturbation and dispersive effects collectively describe the soliton propagation dynamics.

2. Trial Equation Method

Step 1. Consider a model equation
M ( u , u x , u t , u x x , u x t , u t t , ) = 0 ,
where u = u ( x , t ) is the wave profile, while x and t stand for the spatial and temporal variables.
Step 2. The wave transformation
u ( ξ ) = u ( x , t ) , ξ = k ( x w t ) ,
simplifies (2) to
N ( u , u , u , ) = 0 ,
where k is the wave width, while w is the wave velocity.
Step 3. Take the trial equation
u 2 = F ( u ) = i = 0 n a i u i ( ξ ) ,
where a i are constants, while n is a positive integer.
Step 4. Rewrite Equation (5) as an integral form
± ( ξ ξ 0 ) = d u F ( u ) .
On solving the integral (6), we arrive at the exact solutions of Equation (2).
The novelty of this integration approach is that the algorithm retrieves a variety of solution structures from it with this single algorithm. They range from soliton solutions, singular-periodic solutions as well as doubly periodic functions. This is not the case with a variety of other integration algorithms, such as inverse scattering transform, method of undetermined coefficients, semi-inverse variation, Kudryashov’s approach, and others. However, one major limitation for this scheme is that it fails to recover soliton radiation as with other methods except for the Inverse scattering transform that obtains pure solitons and radiation when we do not have reflectionless potentials.

3. Mathematical Analysis

We set the traveling wave hypotheses as
q ( x , t ) = Q ( ξ ) e i ϕ ( x , t ) , ξ = h ( x v t ) , ϕ ( x , t ) = k x + ω t + θ ,
where v, k, ω , θ , ϕ ( x , t ) and Q ξ stand for the velocity, frequency, wave number, phase constant, phase component and amplitude component of the soliton in sequence. Substituting Equation (7) into Equation (1) leads to the real part
c 1 δ 1 h 4 Q + ( c 1 δ 4 h 2 + c 1 δ 5 h 2 ) Q 2 Q + ( c 1 δ 2 h 2 + c 1 δ 3 h 2 ) Q ( Q ) 2 + ( a h 2 6 c 1 δ 1 h 2 k 2 + 3 c 2 δ 7 k h 2 ) Q + c 1 δ 6 Q 5 + ( b c 1 δ 2 k 2 + c 1 δ 3 k 2 c 1 δ 4 k 2 c 1 δ 5 k 2 + c 2 δ 8 k c 2 δ 9 k ) Q 3 + ( ω a k 2 + c 1 δ 1 k 4 c 2 δ 7 k 3 ) Q = 0 ,
and the imaginary part
( 4 c 1 δ 1 k h 3 + c 2 δ 7 h 3 ) Q + ( h v 2 a k h + 4 c 1 δ 1 k 3 h 3 c 2 δ 7 h k 2 ) Q + ( 2 c 1 δ 2 h k 2 c 1 δ 4 k h + 2 c 1 δ 5 k h + c 2 δ 8 h + c 2 δ 9 h ) Q 2 Q = 0 .
Form (9), we yield the constraints
4 c 1 δ 1 k h 3 + c 2 δ 7 h 3 = 0 , h v 2 a k h + 4 c 1 δ 1 k 3 h 3 c 2 δ 7 h k 2 = 0 , 2 c 1 δ 2 h k 2 c 1 δ 4 k h + 2 c 1 δ 5 k h + c 2 δ 8 h + c 2 δ 9 h = 0 .
Simplify Equation (8) as
A 1 Q + A 2 Q 2 Q + A 3 Q ( Q ) 2 + A 4 Q + A 5 Q 5 + A 6 Q 3 + A 7 Q = 0 ,
where
A 1 = c 1 δ 1 h 4 , A 2 = c 1 δ 4 h 2 + c 1 δ 5 h 2 , A 3 = c 1 δ 2 h 2 + c 1 δ 3 h 2 , A 4 = a h 2 6 c 1 δ 1 h 2 k 2 + 3 c 2 δ 7 k h 2 , A 5 = c 1 δ 6 , A 6 = b c 1 δ 2 k 2 + c 1 δ 3 k 2 c 1 δ 4 k 2 c 1 δ 5 k 2 + c 2 δ 8 k c 2 δ 9 k , A 7 = ω a k 2 + c 1 δ 1 k 4 c 2 δ 7 k 3 .
Substituting Equation (5) into Equation (11), we obtain
( Q ) 2 = a 4 Q 4 + a 3 Q 3 + a 2 Q 2 + a 1 Q + a 0 ,
where
a 4 = 2 A 2 A 3 ± ( 2 A 2 + A 3 ) 2 96 A 1 A 5 48 A 1 , a 3 = 0 , a 2 = ( A 3 ± ( 2 A 2 + A 3 ) 2 96 A 1 A 5 ) A 4 2 A 2 A 4 + 24 A 1 A 6 2 A 1 ( 5 ( A 3 ± ( 2 A 2 + A 3 ) 2 96 A 1 A 5 ) 2 A 2 12 A 3 ) , a 1 = 0 , a 0 = ( A 4 ( ( A 3 ± ( 2 A 2 + A 3 ) 2 96 A 1 A 5 ) A 4 2 A 2 A 4 + 24 A 1 A 6 ) 2 A 1 ( 5 ( A 3 ± ( 2 A 2 + A 3 ) 2 96 A 1 A 5 ) 2 A 2 12 A 3 ) ( A 3 ± ( 2 A 2 + A 3 ) 2 96 A 1 A 5 A 4 2 A 2 A 4 + 24 A 1 A 6 ) 2 4 A 1 ( 5 ( A 3 ± ( 2 A 2 + A 3 ) 2 96 A 1 A 5 ) 2 A 2 12 A 3 ) 2 A 7 ) ÷ 1 4 ( ( A 3 ± ( 2 A 2 + A 3 ) 2 96 A 1 A 5 ) 2 A 2 ) + A 3 .
We take transformation
U = ( 4 a 4 ) 1 3 Q 2 , ξ 1 = ( 4 a 4 ) 1 3 ξ .
Equation (13) becomes
( U ξ 1 ) 2 = U 3 + b 2 U 2 + b 1 U ,
where
b 2 = ( 2 ( A 3 ± ( 2 A 2 + A 3 ) 2 96 A 1 A 5 ) A 4 4 A 2 A 4 + 48 A 1 A 6 A 1 ( 5 ( A 3 ± ( 2 A 2 + A 3 ) 2 96 A 1 A 5 ) 2 A 2 12 A 3 ) ) ( 2 A 2 A 3 ± ( 2 A 2 + A 3 ) 2 96 A 1 A 5 12 A 1 ) 2 3 , b 1 = ( ( 4 A 4 ( ( A 3 ± ( 2 A 2 + A 3 ) 2 96 A 1 A 5 ) A 4 2 A 2 A 4 + 24 A 1 A 6 ) 2 A 1 ( 5 ( A 3 ± ( 2 A 2 + A 3 ) 2 96 A 1 A 5 ) 2 A 2 12 A 3 ) ( A 3 ± ( 2 A 2 + A 3 ) 2 96 A 1 A 5 A 4 2 A 2 A 4 + 24 A 1 A 6 ) 2 A 1 ( 5 ( A 3 ± ( 2 A 2 + A 3 ) 2 96 A 1 A 5 ) 2 A 2 12 A 3 ) 2 4 A 7 ) ÷ 1 4 ( ( A 3 ± ( 2 A 2 + A 3 ) 2 96 A 1 A 5 ) 2 A 2 ) + A 3 ) × ( 2 A 2 A 3 ± ( 2 A 2 + A 3 ) 2 96 A 1 A 5 12 A 1 ) 1 3 .
Rewrite Equation (16) as
± ( ξ 1 ξ 0 ) = d U F ( U ) ,
where
F ( U ) = U ( U 2 + b 2 U + b 1 ) .
The second order polynomial discriminant system is
Δ = b 2 2 4 b 1 .
The roots of polynomial U 2 + b 2 U + b 1 are classified by the discriminant system, then all possible solutions of integral (18) are obtained.

4. Exact Solutions

Case 1. Δ = 0 . For U > 0 , if b 2 < 0 , we have the dark and singular solitons
q 1 = { ( 2 A 2 A 3 ± ( 2 A 2 + A 3 ) 2 96 A 1 A 5 12 A 1 ) 1 3 × ( b 2 2 tanh 2 ( 1 2 b 2 2 ( ( 2 A 2 A 3 ± ( 2 A 2 + A 3 ) 2 96 A 1 A 5 12 A 1 ) 1 3 ξ ξ 0 ) ) ) } 1 2 e i ( k x + ω t + θ ) ,
q 2 = { ( 2 A 2 A 3 ± ( 2 A 2 + A 3 ) 2 96 A 1 A 5 12 A 1 ) 1 3 × ( b 2 2 coth 2 ( 1 2 b 2 2 ( ( 2 A 2 A 3 ± ( 2 A 2 + A 3 ) 2 96 A 1 A 5 12 A 1 ) 1 3 ξ ξ 0 ) ) ) } 1 2 e i ( k x + ω t + θ ) ,
if b 2 > 0 , we have the singular periodic wave
q 3 = { ( 2 A 2 A 3 ± ( 2 A 2 + A 3 ) 2 96 A 1 A 5 12 A 1 ) 1 3 × ( b 2 2 tan 2 ( 1 2 b 2 2 ( ( 2 A 2 A 3 ± ( 2 A 2 + A 3 ) 2 96 A 1 A 5 12 A 1 ) 1 3 ξ ξ 0 ) ) ) } 1 2 e i ( k x + ω t + θ ) ,
if b 2 = 0 , we have the rational wave
q 4 = { 4 ( 2 A 2 A 3 ± ( 2 A 2 + A 3 ) 2 96 A 1 A 5 12 A 1 ) 1 3 ( ( 2 A 2 A 3 ± ( 2 A 2 + A 3 ) 2 96 A 1 A 5 12 A 1 ) 1 3 ξ ξ 0 ) 2 }     1 2 e i ( k x + ω t + θ ) .
Case 2. Δ > 0 and b 1 = 0 . For U > b 2 , if b 2 > 0 , we have the dark and singular solitons
q 5 = { ( 2 A 2 A 3 ± ( 2 A 2 + A 3 ) 2 96 A 1 A 5 12 A 1 ) 1 3 × ( b 2 2 tanh 2 ( 1 2 b 2 2 ( ( 2 A 2 A 3 ± ( 2 A 2 + A 3 ) 2 96 A 1 A 5 12 A 1 ) 1 3 ξ ξ 0 ) ) b 2 ) } 1 2 e i ( k x + ω t + θ ) ,
q 6 = { ( 2 A 2 A 3 ± ( 2 A 2 + A 3 ) 2 96 A 1 A 5 12 A 1 ) 1 3 × ( b 2 2 coth 2 ( 1 2 b 2 2 ( ( 2 A 2 A 3 ± ( 2 A 2 + A 3 ) 2 96 A 1 A 5 12 A 1 ) 1 3 ξ ξ 0 ) ) b 2 ) } 1 2 e i ( k x + ω t + θ ) ,
if b 2 < 0 , we have the singular periodic wave
q 7 = { ( 2 A 2 A 3 ± ( 2 A 2 + A 3 ) 2 96 A 1 A 5 12 A 1 ) 1 3 × ( b 2 2 tan 2 ( 1 2 b 2 2 ( ( 2 A 2 A 3 ± ( 2 A 2 + A 3 ) 2 96 A 1 A 5 12 A 1 ) 1 3 ξ ξ 0 ) ) b 2 ) } 1 2 e i ( k x + ω t + θ ) .
Case 3. Δ > 0 and b 1 0 . Suppose that γ 1 < γ 2 < γ 3 , one of them is zero, and others two are roots of U 2 + b 2 U + b 1 . For γ 1 < U < γ 2 , we have the snoidal wave
q 8 = { ( 2 A 2 A 3 ± ( 2 A 2 + A 3 ) 2 96 A 1 A 5 12 A 1 ) 1 3 × [ γ 1 + ( γ 2 γ 1 ) s n 2 ( γ 3 γ 1 2 ( ( 2 A 2 A 3 ± ( 2 A 2 + A 3 ) 2 96 A 1 A 5 12 A 1 ) 1 3 ξ ξ 0 ) , m ) ] } 1 2 e i ( k x + ω t + θ ) ,
and for U > γ 3 , we have the combo snoidal and cnoidal wave
q 9 = { ( 2 A 2 A 3 ± ( 2 A 2 + A 3 ) 2 96 A 1 A 5 12 A 1 ) 1 3 × [ γ 3 γ 2 s n 2 ( γ 3 γ 1 2 ( ( 2 A 2 A 3 ± ( 2 A 2 + A 3 ) 2 96 A 1 A 5 12 A 1 ) 1 3 ξ ξ 0 ) , m ) c n 2 ( γ 3 γ 1 2 ( ( 2 A 2 A 3 ± ( 2 A 2 + A 3 ) 2 96 A 1 A 5 12 A 1 ) 1 3 ξ ξ 0 ) , m ) ] } 1 2 e i ( k x + ω t + θ ) ,
where m 2 = γ 2 γ 1 γ 3 γ 1 .
Case 4. Δ < 0 . For U > 0 , we have the cnoidal wave
q 10 = { ( 2 A 2 A 3 ± ( 2 A 2 + A 3 ) 2 96 A 1 A 5 12 A 1 ) 1 3 × ( 2 b 1 1 + c n ( b 1 1 4 ( ( 2 A 2 A 3 ± ( 2 A 2 + A 3 ) 2 96 A 1 A 5 12 A 1 ) 1 3 ξ ξ 0 ) , m ) b 1 ) } 1 2 e i ( k x + ω t + θ ) ,
where m 2 = 1 b 2 2 b 1 2 .
The Figure 1 and Figure 2 represent the surface plots of a dark soliton and cnoidal wave respectively. The selected parameter values are indicated in the captions.

5. Conclusions

This paper displays a wider variety of solutions to the concatenation model than what has been reported earlier. The cnoidal waves and singular periodic solutions are a few of the new solutions that are being reported here in this paper for the first time. The surface plots are also included so that an illustrative effect is also displayed beside the analytically located solutions. It needs to be noted that the dark and singular solitons that are derived in this work are comparable to the ones that have been reported earlier [3,4,5]. While no other analytical methods are applicable since an exhaustive set of solutions are recovered, at least as far as single soliton solutions are concerned. The next move for this model would be to move to other devices.
The solutions are going to be of great asset in the optoelectronics field. They would provide the fundamental structure of the solutions when the model would later be studied with differential group delay and also with dispersion-flattened fibers. Later, this scalar model would be studied in the context of metamaterials, magneto-optic waveguides and optical couplers. The perturbation terms would later be incorporated, and the extended version of this concatenation model would be addressed successfully. The results of such extended studies are currently awaited.

Author Contributions

Conceptualization, M.-Y.W.; methodology, A.B.; software, Y.Y.; writing—original draft preparation, L.M.; writing—review and editing, S.M.; project administration, H.M.A. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

This research received no external funding.

Acknowledgments

The authors thank the anonymous referees whose comments helped to improve this paper.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

References

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Figure 1. A surface plot of a dark soliton (21) with c 1 = δ 1 = δ 2 = δ 3 = δ 4 = δ 5 = δ 6 = h = ξ 0 = k = ω = θ = 1 and b 2 = 1 .
Figure 1. A surface plot of a dark soliton (21) with c 1 = δ 1 = δ 2 = δ 3 = δ 4 = δ 5 = δ 6 = h = ξ 0 = k = ω = θ = 1 and b 2 = 1 .
Electronics 12 00019 g001
Figure 2. A surface plot of a cnoidal wave (30) with c 1 = δ 1 = δ 2 = δ 3 = δ 4 = δ 5 = δ 6 = h = ξ 0 = k = ω = θ = b 1 = 1 .
Figure 2. A surface plot of a cnoidal wave (30) with c 1 = δ 1 = δ 2 = δ 3 = δ 4 = δ 5 = δ 6 = h = ξ 0 = k = ω = θ = b 1 = 1 .
Electronics 12 00019 g002
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MDPI and ACS Style

Wang, M.-Y.; Biswas, A.; Yıldırım, Y.; Moraru, L.; Moldovanu, S.; Alshehri, H.M. Optical Solitons for a Concatenation Model by Trial Equation Approach. Electronics 2023, 12, 19. https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics12010019

AMA Style

Wang M-Y, Biswas A, Yıldırım Y, Moraru L, Moldovanu S, Alshehri HM. Optical Solitons for a Concatenation Model by Trial Equation Approach. Electronics. 2023; 12(1):19. https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics12010019

Chicago/Turabian Style

Wang, Ming-Yue, Anjan Biswas, Yakup Yıldırım, Luminita Moraru, Simona Moldovanu, and Hashim M. Alshehri. 2023. "Optical Solitons for a Concatenation Model by Trial Equation Approach" Electronics 12, no. 1: 19. https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics12010019

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