304 research outputs found
Anomalous spatio-temporal chaos in a two-dimensional system of non-locally coupled oscillators
A two-dimensional system of non-locally coupled complex Ginzburg-Landau
oscillators is investigated numerically for the first time. As already known
for the one-dimensional case, the system exhibits anomalous spatio-temporal
chaos characterized by power-law spatial correlations. In this chaotic regime,
the amplitude difference between neighboring elements shows temporal noisy
on-off intermittency. The system is also spatially intermittent in this regime,
which is revealed by multi-scaling analysis; the amplitude field is
multi-affine and the difference field is multi-fractal. Correspondingly, the
probability distribution function of the measure defined for each field is
strongly non-Gaussian, showing scale-dependent deviations in the tails due to
intermittency.Comment: 9 pages, 14 figures, submitted to Chao
Phase description of oscillatory convection with a spatially translational mode
We formulate a theory for the phase description of oscillatory convection in
a cylindrical Hele-Shaw cell that is laterally periodic. This system possesses
spatial translational symmetry in the lateral direction owing to the
cylindrical shape as well as temporal translational symmetry. Oscillatory
convection in this system is described by a limit-torus solution that possesses
two phase modes; one is a spatial phase and the other is a temporal phase. The
spatial and temporal phases indicate the position and oscillation of the
convection, respectively. The theory developed in this paper can be considered
as a phase reduction method for limit-torus solutions in infinite-dimensional
dynamical systems, namely, limit-torus solutions to partial differential
equations representing oscillatory convection with a spatially translational
mode. We derive the phase sensitivity functions for spatial and temporal
phases; these functions quantify the phase responses of the oscillatory
convection to weak perturbations applied at each spatial point. Using the phase
sensitivity functions, we characterize the spatiotemporal phase responses of
oscillatory convection to weak spatial stimuli and analyze the spatiotemporal
phase synchronization between weakly coupled systems of oscillatory convection.Comment: 35 pages, 14 figures. Generalizes the phase description method
developed in arXiv:1110.112
Semiclassical Phase Reduction Theory for Quantum Synchronization
We develop a general theoretical framework of semiclassical phase reduction
for analyzing synchronization of quantum limit-cycle oscillators. The dynamics
of quantum dissipative systems exhibiting limit-cycle oscillations are reduced
to a simple, one-dimensional classical stochastic differential equation
approximately describing the phase dynamics of the system under the
semiclassical approximation. The density matrix and power spectrum of the
original quantum system can be approximately reconstructed from the reduced
phase equation. The developed framework enables us to analyze synchronization
dynamics of quantum limit-cycle oscillators using the standard methods for
classical limit-cycle oscillators in a quantitative way. As an example, we
analyze synchronization of a quantum van der Pol oscillator under harmonic
driving and squeezing, including the case that the squeezing is strong and the
oscillation is asymmetric. The developed framework provides insights into the
relation between quantum and classical synchronization and will facilitate
systematic analysis and control of quantum nonlinear oscillators.Comment: 20 pages, 5 figure
Reproducibility of a noisy limit-cycle oscillator induced by a fluctuating input
Reproducibility of a noisy limit-cycle oscillator driven by a random
piecewise constant signal is analyzed. By reducing the model to random phase
maps, it is shown that the reproducibility of the limit cycle generally
improves when the phase maps are monotonically increasing.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, Prog. Theoret. Phys. Suppl. 200
Phase reduction approach to synchronization of spatiotemporal rhythms in reaction-diffusion systems
Reaction-diffusion systems can describe a wide class of rhythmic
spatiotemporal patterns observed in chemical and biological systems, such as
circulating pulses on a ring, oscillating spots, target waves, and rotating
spirals. These rhythmic dynamics can be considered limit cycles of
reaction-diffusion systems. However, the conventional phase-reduction theory,
which provides a simple unified framework for analyzing synchronization
properties of limit-cycle oscillators subjected to weak forcing, has mostly
been restricted to low-dimensional dynamical systems. Here, we develop a
phase-reduction theory for stable limit-cycle solutions of infinite-dimensional
reaction-diffusion systems. By generalizing the notion of isochrons to
functional space, the phase sensitivity function - a fundamental quantity for
phase reduction - is derived. For illustration, several rhythmic dynamics of
the FitzHugh-Nagumo model of excitable media are considered. Nontrivial phase
response properties and synchronization dynamics are revealed, reflecting their
complex spatiotemporal organization. Our theory will provide a general basis
for the analysis and control of spatiotemporal rhythms in various
reaction-diffusion systems.Comment: 19 pages, 6 figures, see the journal for a full versio
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