637 research outputs found
Electronic circuit implementation of chaos synchronization
In this paper, an electronic circuit implementation of a robustly chaotic
two-dimensional map is presented. Two such electronic circuits are realized.
One of the circuits is configured as the driver and the other circuit is
configured as the driven system. Synchronization of chaos between the driver
and the driven system is demonstrated
Longitudinal Variability in Hydrochemistry and Zooplankton Community of a Large River: A LagrangianâBased Approach
The variability in water quality and zooplankton community structure during downstream transport was investigated in the Po river (Italy) using for the first time a Lagrangian sampling approach. Two surveys were conducted, one in spring under relatively high discharge levels, and one at low flows in summer. Twelve stations along a 332âkm stretch of the riverâs lowland reach and four major tributaries were sampled. A hydrodynamic modelling system was used to determine water transport time along the river, with a satisfying fit between simulated and observed discharge values. No clear downstream trend in phosphorus and nitrogen concentrations was found. Conversely, a marked longitudinal decrease in dissolved silica supports the hypothesis of increasing downstream silica limitation during the phytoplankton growing season.In spring, at low residence time, no apparent plankton growth was observed during downstream transport. In summer, higher temperatures and lower turbulence and turbidity associated with longer residence time stimulated algal growth and inâstream reproduction of fastâgrowing rotifer taxa, with the gradual downstream development of a truly potamal assemblage and the increase of the ratio of euplanktonic to littoral/epibenthic rotifer taxa. Crustacean zooplankton density was generally low. The importance of biotic interactions within the zooplankton in driving community abundance and composition appeared to increase in the downstream direction, paralleled by a decrease in the influence of physical forcing. Tributary influence was especially evident where severe anthropogenic alterations of river hydrology and trophic status resulted in enhanced plankton growth, ultimately affecting zooplankton structure in the main river. Copyright © 2016 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/134064/1/rra3028.pdfhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/134064/2/rra3028_am.pd
Symmetries and Cluster Synchronization in Multilayer Networks
Real-world systems in epidemiology, social sciences, power transportation,
economics and engineering are often described as multilayer networks. Here we
first define and compute the symmetries of multilayer networks, and then study
the emergence of cluster synchronization in these networks. We distinguish
between independent layer symmetries which occur in one layer and are
independent of the other layers and dependent layer symmetries which involve
nodes in different layers. We study stability of the cluster synchronous
solution by decoupling the problem into a number of independent blocks and
assessing stability of each block through a Master Stability Function. We see
that blocks associated with dependent layer symmetries have a different
structure than the other blocks, which affects the stability of clusters
associated with these symmetries. Finally, we validate the theory in a fully
analog experiment in which seven electronic oscillators of three kinds are
connected with two kinds of coupling
Synchronization of chaotic oscillator time scales
This paper deals with the chaotic oscillator synchronization. A new approach
to detect the synchronized behaviour of chaotic oscillators has been proposed.
This approach is based on the analysis of different time scales in the time
series generated by the coupled chaotic oscillators. It has been shown that
complete synchronization, phase synchronization, lag synchronization and
generalized synchronization are the particular cases of the synchronized
behavior called as "time--scale synchronization". The quantitative measure of
chaotic oscillator synchronous behavior has been proposed. This approach has
been applied for the coupled Rossler systems.Comment: 29 pages, 11 figures, published in JETP. 100, 4 (2005) 784-79
Management of infectious lymphadenitis in children
Lymphadenopathy is an irregularity in the size and texture of the lymph nodes, which is quite common in childhood. When the enlargement of lymph nodes is caused by inflammatory and infectious processes, it is called lymphadenitis. The main objective of this manuscript is to summarize the common infectious etiologies and presentations of lymphadenitis in children providing a management guide for clinical practice. PubMed was used to search for all of the studies published up to April 2021 using keywords such as âlymphadenitisâ and âchildrenâ. Literature analysis showed that the differential diagnosis for lymphadenitis in pediatrics is broad. Although lymph node enlargement in children is usually benign and self-limited, it is important to exclude malignant etiology. In most cases, history and physical examination allow to identify the correct diagnosis and start a proper treatment with a prompt resolution of the lymphadenopathy. However, particularly in the case of persistent lymphadenitis, determining the cause of lymph node enlargement may be difficult, and the exact etiology may not be identified despite extensive investigations. Further studies should develop and validate an algorithm to assist pediatricians in the diagnosis and timely treatment of lymphadenitis, suggesting situations in which a watchful waiting may be considered a safe approach, those in which empiric antibiotic therapy should be administered, and those requiring a timely diagnostic work-up
Synchronization of Coupled Systems with Spatiotemporal Chaos
We argue that the synchronization transition of stochastically coupled
cellular automata, discovered recently by L.G. Morelli {\it et al.} (Phys. Rev.
{\bf 58 E}, R8 (1998)), is generically in the directed percolation universality
class. In particular, this holds numerically for the specific example studied
by these authors, in contrast to their claim. For real-valued systems with
spatiotemporal chaos such as coupled map lattices, we claim that the
synchronization transition is generically in the universality class of the
Kardar-Parisi-Zhang equation with a nonlinear growth limiting term.Comment: 4 pages, including 3 figures; submitted to Phys. Rev.
Synchronization and directed percolation in coupled map lattices
We study a synchronization mechanism, based on one-way coupling of
all-or-nothing type, applied to coupled map lattices with several different
local rules. By analyzing the metric and the topological distance between the
two systems, we found two different regimes: a strong chaos phase in which the
transition has a directed percolation character and a weak chaos phase in which
the synchronization transition occurs abruptly. We are able to derive some
analytical approximations for the location of the transition point and the
critical properties of the system.
We propose to use the characteristics of this transition as indicators of the
spatial propagation of chaoticity.Comment: 12 pages + 12 figure
Dimension of interaction dynamics
A method allowing to distinguish interacting from non-interacting systems
based on available time series is proposed and investigated. Some facts
concerning generalized Renyi dimensions that form the basis of our method are
proved. We show that one can find the dimension of the part of the attractor of
the system connected with interaction between its parts. We use our method to
distinguish interacting from non-interacting systems on the examples of
logistic and H\'enon maps. A classification of all possible interaction schemes
is given.Comment: 15 pages, 14 (36) figures, submitted to PR
Transition to Stochastic Synchronization in Spatially Extended Systems
Spatially extended dynamical systems, namely coupled map lattices, driven by
additive spatio-temporal noise are shown to exhibit stochastic synchronization.
In analogy with low-dymensional systems, synchronization can be achieved only
if the maximum Lyapunov exponent becomes negative for sufficiently large noise
amplitude. Moreover, noise can suppress also the non-linear mechanism of
information propagation, that may be present in the spatially extended system.
A first example of phase transition is observed when both the linear and the
non-linear mechanisms of information production disappear at the same critical
value of the noise amplitude. The corresponding critical properties can be
hardly identified numerically, but some general argument suggests that they
could be ascribed to the Kardar-Parisi-Zhang universality class. Conversely,
when the non-linear mechanism prevails on the linear one, another type of phase
transition to stochastic synchronization occurs. This one is shown to belong to
the universality class of directed percolation.Comment: 21 pages, Latex - 14 EPS Figs - To appear on Physical Review
Synchronization of fractional order chaotic systems
The chaotic dynamics of fractional order systems begin to attract much
attentions in recent years. In this brief report, we study the master-slave
synchronization of fractional order chaotic systems. It is shown that
fractional order chaotic systems can also be synchronized.Comment: 3 pages, 5 figure
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