From 52ff45a7c687d502492be0fa6e54f9b99d501465 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: Prefetch
Date: Mon, 27 Feb 2023 15:03:21 +0100
Subject: Publish "Website adventures" part 4 about images

---
 source/know/concept/modulational-instability/index.md | 2 +-
 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-)

(limited to 'source/know/concept/modulational-instability')

diff --git a/source/know/concept/modulational-instability/index.md b/source/know/concept/modulational-instability/index.md
index d646503..3c0de4b 100644
--- a/source/know/concept/modulational-instability/index.md
+++ b/source/know/concept/modulational-instability/index.md
@@ -198,7 +198,7 @@ then it can in turn also cause MI in its own surroundings,
 leading to a cascade of secondary and tertiary gain areas.
 This is seen above for $$z > 30 L_\mathrm{NL}$$.
 
-What we described is "pure" MI, but there also exists
+Here we described "pure" MI, but there also exists
 a different type caused by Raman scattering.
 In that case, amplification occurs at the strongest peak of the Raman gain $$\tilde{g}_R(\omega)$$,
 even when the parent pulse has $$\beta_2 > 0$$.
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