2,036 research outputs found
Stochastic resonance with different periodic forces in overdamped two coupled anharmonic oscillators
We study the stochastic resonance phenomenon in the overdamped two coupled
anharmonic oscillators with Gaussian noise and driven by different external
periodic forces. We consider (i) sine, (ii) square, (iii) symmetric saw-tooth,
(iv) asymmetric saw-tooth, (v) modulus of sine and (vi) rectified sinusoidal
forces. The external periodic forces and Gaussian noise term are added to one
of the two state variables of the system. The effect of each force is studied
separately. In the absence of noise term, when the amplitude of the applied
periodic force is varied cross-well motion is realized above a critical value
() of . This is found for all the forces except the modulus
of sine and rectified sinusoidal forces.Stochastic resonance is observed in the
presence of noise and periodic forces. The effect of different forces is
compared. The logarithmic plot of mean residence time
against where is the intensity of the noise and
is the value of at which cross-well motion is initiated
shows a sharp knee-like structure for all the forces. Signal-to-noise ratio is
found to be maximum at the noise intensity at which mean
residence time is half of the period of the driving force for the forces such
as sine, square, symmetric saw-tooth and asymmetric saw-tooth waves. With
modulus of sine wave and rectified sine wave, the peaks at a value of
for which sum of in two wells of the potential of the system is
half of the period of the driving force. For the chosen values of and
, signal-to-noise ratio is found to be maximum for square wave while it
is minimum for modulus of sine and rectified sinusoidal waves.Comment: 13 figures,27 page
Experimental confirmation of chaotic phase synchronization in coupled time-delayed electronic circuits
We report the first experimental demonstration of chaotic phase
synchronization (CPS) in unidirectionally coupled time-delay systems using
electronic circuits. We have also implemented experimentally an efficient
methodology for characterizing CPS, namely the localized sets. Snapshots of the
evolution of coupled systems and the sets as observed from the oscilloscope
confirming CPS are shown experimentally. Numerical results from different
approaches, namely phase differences, localized sets, changes in the largest
Lyapunov exponents and the correlation of probability of recurrence
(), corroborate the experimental observations.Comment: Physical_Review_E_82_065201(R) 201
Control of chaos by nonfeedback methods in a simple electronic circuit system and the FitzHugh-Nagumo equation
Various control algorithms have been proposed in recent years to control chaotic systems. These methods are broadly classified into feedback and nonfeedback methods. In this paper, we make a critical analysis of nonfeedback methods such as (i) addition of constant bias, (ii) addition of second periodic force, (iii) addition of weak periodic pulse, and (iv) entrainment control. We apply these methods to a simple electronic circuit, namely, the Murali-Lakshmanan-Chua circuit system and FitzHugh-Nagumo equation. We make a comparative study of the various features associated with the algorithms
Modeling the dynamical evolution of the M87 globular cluster system
We study the dynamical evolution of the M87 globular cluster system (GCS)
with a number of numerical simulations. We explore a range of different initial
conditions for the GCS mass function (GCMF), for the GCS spatial distribution
and for the GCS velocity distribution. We confirm that an initial power-law
GCMF like that observed in young cluster systems can be readily transformed
through dynamical processes into a bell-shaped GCMF. However,only models with
initial velocity distributions characterized by a strong radial anisotropy
increasing with the galactocentric distance are able to reproduce the observed
constancy of the GCMF at all radii.We show that such strongly radial orbital
distributions are inconsistent with the observed kinematics of the M87 GCS. The
evolution of models with a bell-shaped GCMF with a turnover similar to that
currently observed in old GCS is also investigated. We show that models with
this initial GCMF can satisfy all the observational constraints currently
available on the GCS spatial distribution,the GCS velocity distribution and on
the GCMF properties.In particular these models successfully reproduce both the
lack of a radial gradient of the GCS mean mass recently found in an analysis of
HST images of M87 at multiple locations, and the observed kinematics of the M87
GCS.Our simulations also show that evolutionary processes significantly affect
the initial GCS properties by leading to the disruption of many clusters and
changing the masses of those which survive.The preferential disruption of inner
clusters flattens the initial GCS number density profile and it can explain the
rising specific frequency with radius; we show that the inner flattening
observed in the M87 GCS spatial distribution can be the result of the effects
of dynamical evolution on an initially steep density profile. (abridged)Comment: 15 pages,14 figures;accepted for publication in The Astrophysical
Journa
Probing Decoherence with Electromagnetically Induced Transparency in Superconductive Quantum Circuits
Superconductive quantum circuits (SQCs) comprise quantized energy levels that
may be coupled via microwave electromagnetic fields. Described in this way, one
may draw a close analogy to atoms with internal (electronic) levels coupled by
laser light fields. In this Letter, we present a superconductive analog to
electromagnetically induced transparency (S-EIT) that utilizes SQC designs of
present day experimental consideration. We discuss how S-EIT can be used to
establish macroscopic coherence in such systems and, thereby, utilized as a
sensitive probe of decoherence.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
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