Abstract
We show that the temporal analog of a Fabry–Perot resonator (FPR) can be realized by using two moving temporal boundaries, formed by intense pump pulses inside a dispersive medium (such as an optical fiber). We analyze such FPRs using a transfer-matrix method, similar to that used for spatial structures containing multiple thin films. We consider a temporal slab formed using a single square-shape pump pulse and find that the resonance of such an FPR has transmission peaks whose quality ($Q$) factors decrease rapidly with an increasing velocity difference between the pump and probe pulses. We propose an improved design by using two pump pulses. We apply our transfer-matrix method to this design and show considerable improvement in the $Q$ factors of various peaks. We also show that such FPRs can be realized in practice by using two short pump pulses that propagate as solitons inside a fiber. We verified the results of the transfer-matrix method by directly solving the pulse propagation equation with the split-step Fourier method.
© 2021 Optical Society of America
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