Descriptivist theory of names

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Maxwell's Equations, when converted to cylindrical coordinates, and with the boundary conditions for an optical fiber while including birefringence as an effect taken into account, will yield the coupled nonlinear Schrödinger equations. After employing the Inverse scattering transform (a procedure analogous to the Fourier Transform and Laplace Transform) on the resulting equations, the Manakov system is then obtained. The most general form of the Manakov system is as follows:

v1=iξv1+q1v2+q2v3
v2=q1*v1+iξv2
v3=q2*v1+iξv3.

It is a coupled system of linear ordinary differential equations. The functions q1,q2 represent the envelope of the electromagnetic field as an initial condition.

For theoretical purposes, the integral equation version is often very useful. It is as follows:

limxaeiξxv1limxbeiξxv1=ab[eiξxq1v2+eiξxq2v3]dx
limxaeiξxv2limxbeiξxv2=abeiξxq1*v1dx
limxaeiξxv3limxbeiξxv3=abeiξxq2*v1dx

One may make further substitutions and simplifications, depending on the limits used and the assumptions about boundary or initial conditions. One important concept is that ξ is complex; assumptions must be made about this eigenvalue parameter. If a non-zero solution is desired, the imaginary part of the eigenvalue cannot change sign; accordingly, most researchers take the imaginary part to be positive.

References

  • C. Menyuk, Application of multiple-length-scale methods to the study of optical fiber transmission, Journal of Engineering Mathematics 36: 113-136, 1999, Kluwer Academic Publishers, Netherlands.
  • D. Kaup, B. Malomed, Soliton Trapping and Daughter Waves in the Manakov Model, Physical Review A, Vol. 48, No. 1, July 1993.
  • S. V. Manakov, Remarks on the Integrals of the Euler Equations of the n-dimensional Heavy Top, Functional Anal. Appl., Vol. 10, pp. 93–94, 1976.