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Dive into the research topics where Ilya D. Vatnik is active.

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Featured researches published by Ilya D. Vatnik.


Optics Express | 2011

Cascaded random distributed feedback Raman fiber laser operating at 1.2 μm

Ilya D. Vatnik; D. V. Churkin; Sergey A. Babin; Sergei K. Turitsyn

We demonstrate a CW random distributed feedback Raman fiber laser operating in a 1.2 μm spectral band. The laser generates up to 3.8 W of the quasi-CW radiation at 1175 nm with the narrow spectrum of 1 nm. Conversion efficiency reaches 60%. Up to 1 W is generated at the second Stokes wavelength of 1242 nm. It is shown that the generation spectrum of RDFB Raman fiber laser is much narrower than the spectrum in the system without a weak random feedback.


Optics Express | 2012

Power optimization of random distributed feedback fiber lasers

Ilya D. Vatnik; Dmitry Churkin; Sergey A. Babin

We present a comprehensive study of power output characteristics of random distributed feedback Raman fiber lasers. The calculated optimal slope efficiency of the backward wave generation in the one-arm configuration is shown to be as high as ~90% for 1 W threshold. Nevertheless, in real applications a presence of a small reflection at fiber ends can appreciably deteriorate the power performance. The developed numerical model well describes the experimental data.


Advances in Optics and Photonics | 2015

Recent advances in fundamentals and applications of random fiber lasers

Dmitry Churkin; Srikanth Sugavanam; Ilya D. Vatnik; Z. N. Wang; Evgenii Podivilov; Sergey A. Babin; Yunjiang Rao; Sergei K. Turitsyn

Random fiber lasers blend together attractive features of traditional random lasers, such as low cost and simplicity of fabrication, with high-performance characteristics of conventional fiber lasers, such as good directionality and high efficiency. Low coherence of random lasers is important for speckle-free imaging applications. The random fiber laser with distributed feedback proposed in 2010 led to a quickly developing class of light sources that utilize inherent optical fiber disorder in the form of the Rayleigh scattering and distributed Raman gain. The random fiber laser is an interesting and practically important example of a photonic device based on exploitation of optical medium disorder. We provide an overview of recent advances in this field, including high-power and high-efficiency generation, spectral and statistical properties of random fiber lasers, nonlinear kinetic theory of such systems, and emerging applications in telecommunications and distributed sensing.


Laser Physics Letters | 2014

High-efficiency generation in a short random fiber laser

Ilya D. Vatnik; Dmitry Churkin; Evgeni V. Podivilov; Sergey A. Babin

We demonstrate a high-efficiency random lasing in a 850 m span of a phosphosilicate fiber. Random distributed feedback owing to the Rayleigh backscattering in the fiber enables narrowband generation with output power of up to 7.3 W at the Stokes wavelength λS = 1308 nm from 11 W of the pump power at λP = 1115 nm. The laser demonstrates unique generation efficiency. Near the generation threshold, more than 2 W of output power is generated from only 0.5 W of pump power excess over the generation threshold. At high pump power, the quantum conversion efficiency defined as a ratio of generated and pump photons at the laser output exceeds 100%. It is explained by the fact that every pump photon is converted into the Stokes photon far from the output fiber end, while the Stokes photons have lower attenuation than the pump photons.


Nature Communications | 2011

Wave kinetics of random fibre lasers

Dmitry Churkin; I. Kolokolov; E.V. Podivilov; Ilya D. Vatnik; Maxim Nikulin; S. S. Vergeles; I.S. Terekhov; V. V. Lebedev; Gregory Falkovich; Sergey A. Babin; Sergei K. Turitsyn

Traditional wave kinetics describes the slow evolution of systems with many degrees of freedom to equilibrium via numerous weak non-linear interactions and fails for very important class of dissipative (active) optical systems with cyclic gain and losses, such as lasers with non-linear intracavity dynamics. Here we introduce a conceptually new class of cyclic wave systems, characterized by non-uniform double-scale dynamics with strong periodic changes of the energy spectrum and slow evolution from cycle to cycle to a statistically steady state. Taking a practically important example—random fibre laser—we show that a model describing such a system is close to integrable non-linear Schrödinger equation and needs a new formalism of wave kinetics, developed here. We derive a non-linear kinetic theory of the laser spectrum, generalizing the seminal linear model of Schawlow and Townes. Experimental results agree with our theory. The work has implications for describing kinetics of cyclical systems beyond photonics. Kinetic theory is a mathematical framework that is used to describe non-linear systems with a large number of degrees of freedom. Here, the authors develop a concept of active wave kinetics of cyclic systems and describe the function of random fibre laser.


Optics Express | 2012

Experimental and theoretical study of longitudinal power distribution in a random DFB fiber laser.

Dmitry Churkin; Atalla El-Taher; Ilya D. Vatnik; Juan Diego Ania-Castañón; Paul Harper; Eugeny V. Podivilov; Sergey A. Babin; Sergei K. Turitsyn

We have measured the longitudinal power distribution inside a random distributed feedback Raman fiber laser. The observed distribution has a sharp maximum whose position depends on pump power. The spatial distribution profiles are different for the first and the second Stokes waves. Both analytic solution and results of direct numerical modeling are in excellent agreement with experimental observations.


Laser Physics Letters | 2015

Random distributed feedback Raman fiber laser with polarized pumping

Han Wu; Zhuo Wang; Dmitry Churkin; Ilya D. Vatnik; Mengqiu Fan; Yun Jiang Rao

In this letter, the polarization properties of a random fiber laser operating via Raman gain and random distributed feedback owing to Rayleigh scattering are investigated for the first time. Using polarized pump, the partially polarized generation is obtained with a generation spectrum exhibiting discrete narrow spectral features contrary to the smooth spectrum observed for the depolarized pump. The threshold, output power, degree of polarization and the state of polarization (SOP) of the lasing can be significantly influenced by the SOP of the pump. Fine narrow spectral components are also sensitive to the SOP of the pump wave. Furthermore, we found that random lasings longitudinal power distributions are different in the case of polarized and depolarized pumping that results in considerable reduction of the generation slope efficiency for the polarized radiation. Our results indicate that polarization effects play an important role on the performance of the random fiber laser. This work improves the understanding of the physics of random lasing in fibers and makes a step forward towards the establishment of the vector model of random fiber lasers.


Laser Physics | 2014

Narrow-band generation and mode correlations in a short Raman fibre laser

Ilya D. Vatnik; Oleg A. Gorbunov; Dmitry Churkin

We design a Raman fibre laser with a short cavity providing narrow-band generation. The laser is based on a commercial single-mode fibre (980-HP) span of 12 m length. The laser generates up to 11 W of intracavity power. Even at high generation power, the laser spectrum is narrow (less than 200 pm) - several times narrower than for conventional Raman fibre lasers based on longer fibres. The intensity dynamics reveals indications of mode correlations.


Laser Physics | 2011

Random distributed feedback Raman fiber laser operating in a 1.2 μm wavelength range

Dmitry Churkin; Ilya D. Vatnik; Sergei K. Turitsyn; S. A. Babin

The random distributed feedback fiber laser operating via the stimulated Raman scattering and random distributed feedback based on the Rayleigh scattering is demonstrated in the 1.2 μm frequency band. The RDFB fiber laser generates at 1174 nm up to 2.4 W of output power with corresponding slope efficiency more than 30%. The output radiation has the spectral shape similar to the conventional Raman fiber lasers and spectral width less than 1.7 nm.


Optics Express | 2017

Multi-peak structure of generation spectrum of random distributed feedback fiber Raman lasers

Ilya D. Vatnik; Ekaterina A. Zlobina; S. I. Kablukov; S. A. Babin

We study spectral features of the generation of random distributed feedback fiber Raman laser arising from two-peak shape of the Raman gain spectral profile realized in the germanosilicate fibers. We demonstrate that number of peaks can be calculated using power balance model considering different subcomponents within each Stokes component.

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Dmitry Churkin

Novosibirsk State University

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Sergey A. Babin

Russian Academy of Sciences

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Andrey A. Sukhorukov

Australian National University

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Alexey Tikan

Novosibirsk State University

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Artem Pankov

Novosibirsk State University

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Andrey A. Sukhorukov

Australian National University

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Maxim Nikulin

Russian Academy of Sciences

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Oleg A. Gorbunov

Novosibirsk State University

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