In optical cavities, self-organized patterns can emerge because of diffraction and opti-
cal nonlinearities. This phenomena can be used to induce self-organization of an atomic
cloud. Thus, this pattern can be understood as a lattice of cold atomic groups coupled by
diffraction. From this point of view, there is an analogy between this system and a lattice
of atoms in a solid. From solid-state theory, a perturbation of the position of an atom in
the lattice leads to a sound wave that propagates along the solid.
Following this idea, our aim in this work is to study the response of a self-organized
pattern to a localized perturbation at one of the pattern peaks. Since the system is highly
dissipative, we first study the dynamics of this system in order to choose a set of parameters
close to a critical point in such a way that gain can counterbalance dissipation allowing the
perturbations to propagate longer. Next, we run numerical simulations of our partial differential
equation, taking as an initial condition the perturbed pattern. From the numerical results
we extract propagation features such as the velocity, period, symmetry, etc.
Finally, we characterize the perturbation propagation theoretically, and compare the
analytical results with the numerical integration.
Supervisor: Damià Gomila
Jury: Maxi San Miguel, Emilio Hernández-García, and Damià Gomila
Conecta CSIC link: https://conectaha.csic.es/b/dam-ezx-igg-6h7
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