Figure 1 shows a
light beam that propagates in the z direction, while x and y are the transverse directions. If we assume that the
electric field as {\cal E}(x,y,z,t), where t denotes time, is linearly polarized and therefore can be treated as a scalar, we can express it in terms of the slowly varying normalized complex envelope E(x,y,z,t) in this way :{\cal E}(x,y,z,t)\propto E(x,y,z,t)e^{i(\omega_0/\tilde{c})(z-\tilde{c}t)} + \text{c.c.} where \omega_0 is the frequency of the light beam that is injected into the cavity and \tilde{c} of the light velocity in the
Kerr medium that fills the cavity. For definiteness, consider a ring cavity (Fig. 2) of very high quality (High-Q cavity). In the original LLE, one assumes conditions such that the envelope E is independent of the longitudinal variable z (i.e. uniform along the cavity), so that E=E(x,y,t). The equation reads {{NumBlk|:|\frac{\partial E}{\partial \bar{t}}=E_\text{in}-E-i\theta E+i|E|^2 E+i\nabla^2_\perp E|}} :\nabla^2_\perp E=\frac{\partial^2E}{\partial \bar{x}^2}+\frac{\partial^2E}{\partial \bar{y}^2} where \bar{t} and \bar{x}, \bar{y} are normalized temporal and spatial variables, i.e. \bar{t}=\kappa t, \bar{x}=x/\ell_d, \bar{y}=y/\ell_d, with \kappa being the cavity decay rate or cavity linewidth, \ell_d the diffraction length in the cavity. \theta=(\omega_c-\omega_0)/\kappa is the cavity detuning parameter, with \omega_c being the cavity frequency nearest to \omega_0. In the righthand side of Eq.(), E_\text{in} is the normalized amplitude of the input field that is injected into the cavity, the second is the decay term, the third is the detuning term, the fourth is the cubic nonlinear term that takes into account the Kerr medium, the last term with the transverse Laplacian \nabla_\perp^2 describes diffraction in the
paraxial approximation. Conditions of self-focusing are assumed. We refer to Eq.() as the transverse LLE. Some years later than, there was the formulation of the longitudinal LLE, in which diffraction is replaced by dispersion. In this case one assumes that the envelope E is independent of the transverse variables x and y, so that E=E(z,t). The longitudinal LLE reads {{NumBlk|:|\frac{\partial E}{\partial \bar{t}}=E_\text{in}-E-i\theta E+i|E|^2 E+i\frac{\partial^2 E}{\partial\bar{z}^2}|}} with \bar{z}=z/a, where a depends, in particular on the dispersion parameter at second order. Conditions of anomalous dispersion are assumed. An important point is that, once E(\bar{z},\bar{t}) is obtained by solving Eq.(), one must come back to the original variables z,t and replace z by z-\tilde{c}t, so that a z-dependent stationary solution (stationary pattern) becomes a travelling pattern (with velocity \tilde{c}). From a mathematical viewpoint, the LLE amounts to a driven, damped, detuned
nonlinear Schroedinger equation. The transverse LLE () is in 2D from the spatial viewpoint. In a waveguide configuration E depends only on one spatial variable, say x, and the transverse Laplacian is replaced by \frac{\partial^2 E}{\partial \bar{x}^2} and one has the transverse LLE in 1D. The longitudinal LLE () is equivalent to the transverse LLE in 1D. In some papers dealing with the longitudinal case one considers dispersion beyond the second order, so that Eq.() includes also terms with derivatives of order higher than second with respect to \bar{z}. == Uniform stationary solutions. Connection with
optical bistability.
Four-wave mixing and
pattern formation. ==