Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Andrés Aragoneses is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Andrés Aragoneses.


Scientific Reports | 2015

Unveiling the complex organization of recurrent patterns in spiking dynamical systems

Andrés Aragoneses; Sandro Perrone; Taciano Sorrentino; M. C. Torrent; Cristina Masoller

Complex systems displaying recurrent spike patterns are ubiquitous in nature. Understanding the organization of these patterns is a challenging task. Here we study experimentally the spiking output of a semiconductor laser with feedback. By using symbolic analysis we unveil a nontrivial organization of patterns, revealing serial spike correlations. The probabilities of the patterns display a well-defined, hierarchical and clustered structure that can be understood in terms of a delayed model. Most importantly, we identify a minimal model, a modified circle map, which displays the same symbolic organization. The validity of this minimal model is confirmed by analyzing the output of the forced laser. Since the circle map describes many dynamical systems, including neurons and cardiac cells, our results suggest that similar correlations and hierarchies of patterns can be found in other systems. Our findings also pave the way for optical neurons that could provide a controllable set up to mimic neuronal activity.


Physical Review Letters | 2016

Unveiling temporal correlations characteristic of a phase transition in the output intensity of a fiber laser

Andrés Aragoneses; Laura Carpi; Nikita Tarasov; Dmitry Churkin; M. C. Torrent; Cristina Masoller; Sergei K. Turitsyn

We use advanced statistical tools of time-series analysis to characterize the dynamical complexity of the transition to optical wave turbulence in a fiber laser. Ordinal analysis and the horizontal visibility graph applied to the experimentally measured laser output intensity reveal the presence of temporal correlations during the transition from the laminar to the turbulent lasing regimes. Both methods unveil coherent structures with well-defined time scales and strong correlations both, in the timing of the laser pulses and in their peak intensities. Our approach is generic and may be used in other complex systems that undergo similar transitions involving the generation of extreme fluctuations.


Scientific Reports | 2013

Distinguishing signatures of determinism and stochasticity in spiking complex systems

Andrés Aragoneses; Nicolás Rubido; Jordi Tiana-Alsina; M. C. Torrent; Cristina Masoller

We describe a method to infer signatures of determinism and stochasticity in the sequence of apparently random intensity dropouts emitted by a semiconductor laser with optical feedback. The method uses ordinal time-series analysis to classify experimental data of inter-dropout-intervals (IDIs) in two categories that display statistically significant different features. Despite the apparent randomness of the dropout events, one IDI category is consistent with waiting times in a resting state until noise triggers a dropout, and the other is consistent with dropouts occurring during the return to the resting state, which have a clear deterministic component. The method we describe can be a powerful tool for inferring signatures of determinism in the dynamics of complex systems in noisy environments, at an event-level description of their dynamics.


Optics Express | 2015

Effects of periodic forcing on the temporally correlated spikes of a semiconductor laser with feedback.

Taciano Sorrentino; C. Quintero-Quiroz; Andrés Aragoneses; M. C. Torrent; Cristina Masoller

Optical excitable devices that mimic neuronal behavior can be building-blocks of novel, brain-inspired information processing systems. A relevant issue is to understand how such systems represent, via correlated spikes, the information of a weak external input. Semiconductor lasers with optical feedback operating in the low frequency fluctuations regime have been shown to display optical spikes with intrinsic temporal correlations similar to those of biological neurons. Here we investigate how the spiking laser output represents a weak periodic input that is implemented via direct modulation of the laser pump current. We focus on understanding the influence of the modulation frequency. Experimental sequences of inter-spike-intervals (ISIs) are recorded and analyzed by using the ordinal symbolic methodology that identifies and characterizes serial correlations in datasets. The change in the statistics of the various symbols with the modulation frequency is empirically shown to be related to specific changes in the ISI distribution, which arise due to different phase-locking regimes. A good qualitative agreement is also found between simulations of the Lang and Kobayashi model and observations. This methodology is an efficient way to detect subtle changes in noisy correlated ISI sequences and may be applied to investigate other optical excitable devices.


Optics Express | 2014

Experimental and numerical study of the symbolic dynamics of a modulated external-cavity semiconductor laser

Andrés Aragoneses; Taciano Sorrentino; Sandro Perrone; Daniel J. Gauthier; M. C. Torrent; Cristina Masoller

We study the symbolic dynamics of a stochastic excitable optical system with periodic forcing. Specifically, we consider a directly modulated semiconductor laser with optical feedback in the low frequency fluctuations (LFF) regime. We use a method of symbolic time-series analysis that allows us to uncover serial correlations in the sequence of intensity dropouts. By transforming the sequence of inter-dropout intervals into a sequence of symbolic patterns and analyzing the statistics of the patterns, we unveil correlations among several consecutive dropouts and we identify clear changes in the dynamics as the modulation amplitude increases. To confirm the robustness of the observations, the experiments were performed using two lasers under different feedback conditions. Simulations of the Lang-Kobayashi (LK) model, including spontaneous emission noise, are found to be in good agreement with the observations, providing an interpretation of the correlations present in the dropout sequence as due to the interplay of the underlying attractor topology, the external forcing, and the noise that sustains the dropout events.


Physical review applied | 2017

Robust and Stable Delay Interferometers with Application to d -Dimensional Time-Frequency Quantum Key Distribution

Nurul T. Islam; Clinton Cahall; Andrés Aragoneses; A. Lezama; Jungsang Kim; Daniel J. Gauthier

We investigate experimentally a cascade of temperature-compensated unequal-path interferometers that can be used to measure frequency states in a high-dimensional quantum distribution system. In particular, we demonstrate that commercially-available interferometers have sufficient environmental isolation so that they maintain an interference visibility greater than 98.5\% at a wavelength of 1550 nm over extended periods with only moderate passive control of the interferometer temperature (


Journal of Physics D | 2007

TSDC study of the glass transition: correlation with calorimetric data

J.A. Diego; J. Sellarès; Andrés Aragoneses; M. Mudarra; J.C. Cañadas; J. Belana

99\%


Optics Letters | 2013

Multidimensional subwavelength position sensing using a semiconductor laser with optical feedback

Seth D. Cohen; Andrés Aragoneses; Damien Rontani; M. C. Torrent; Cristina Masoller; Daniel J. Gauthier

over an hour, which is mainly limited by our ability to precisely generate these states. Overall, our results indicate that these interferometers are well suited for realistic time-frequency quantum distribution protocols.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2014

Experimental study of the complex dynamics of semiconductor lasers with feedback via symbolic time-series analysis

Taciano Sorrentino; Andrés Aragoneses; Sandro Perrone; Daniel J. Gauthier; M. C. Torrent; Cristina Masoller

The glass transition in amorphous poly(ethylene terephthalate) is studied by thermally stimulated depolarization currents (TSDC) and differential scanning calorimetry (DSC). The ability of TSDC to decompose a distributed relaxation, as the glass transition, into its elementary components is demonstrated. Two fractional polarization techniques, windows polarization (WP) and non-isothermal windows polarization (NIW) are employed to assess the influence of thermal history in the results. The Tool–Narayanaswami–Moynihan model has been used to fit the TSDC spectra. The most important contributions to the relaxation comes from modes with a value of the non–linearity parameter (x) around 0.7. Activation energies yield by this model are located around 1 eV (96 kJ mol−1) for polarization temperature (Tp) below 50 °C and they rise up to values higher than 8 eV (771 kJ mol−1) as Tp increases (up to 80 °C). There are few differences between results obtained with WP and NIW but, nonetheless, these are discussed. The obtained kinetic parameters are tested against DSC results in several conditions. Calculated DSC curves at several cooling and heating rates can reproduce qualitatively experimental DSC results. These results also demonstrate that modelling of the non–equilibrium kinetics involved in TSDC spectroscopy is a useful experimental tool for glass transition studies in polar polymers.


ieee international conference on solid dielectrics | 2007

Dispersive mobility in polyimide by surface voltage decay measurement

Andrés Aragoneses; M. Mudarra; J. Belana; J.A. Diego

We demonstrate experimentally how to harness quasi-periodic dynamics in a semiconductor laser with dual optical feedback for measuring subwavelength changes in each arm of the cavity simultaneously. We exploit the multifrequency spectrum of quasi-periodic dynamics and show that independent frequency shifts are mapped uniquely to two-dimensional displacements of the arms in the external cavity. Considering a laser diode operating at telecommunication wavelength λ≈1550 nm, we achieve an average nanoscale resolution of approximately 9.8 nm (~λ/160).

Collaboration


Dive into the Andrés Aragoneses's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Cristina Masoller

Polytechnic University of Catalonia

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

M. C. Torrent

Polytechnic University of Catalonia

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Taciano Sorrentino

Polytechnic University of Catalonia

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

J. Belana

Polytechnic University of Catalonia

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

J.A. Diego

Polytechnic University of Catalonia

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Sandro Perrone

Polytechnic University of Catalonia

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

M. Mudarra

Polytechnic University of Catalonia

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge