148 research outputs found

    Very long transients in globally coupled maps

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    Very long transients are found in the partially ordered phase of type II of globally coupled logistic maps. The transients always lead the system in this phase to a state with a few synchronous clusters. This transient behaviour is not significantly influenced by the introduction of weak noises. However, such noises generally favor cluster partitions with more stable periodic dynamics.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures include

    On the genealogy of a population of biparental individuals

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    If one goes backward in time, the number of ancestors of an individual doubles at each generation. This exponential growth very quickly exceeds the population size, when this size is finite. As a consequence, the ancestors of a given individual cannot be all different and most remote ancestors are repeated many times in any genealogical tree. The statistical properties of these repetitions in genealogical trees of individuals for a panmictic closed population of constant size N can be calculated. We show that the distribution of the repetitions of ancestors reaches a stationary shape after a small number Gc ~ log N of generations in the past, that only about 80% of the ancestral population belongs to the tree (due to coalescence of branches), and that two trees for individuals in the same population become identical after Gc generations have elapsed. Our analysis is easy to extend to the case of exponentially growing population.Comment: 14 pages, 7 figures, to appear in the Journal of Theoretical Biolog

    Replica-symmetry breaking in dynamical glasses

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    Systems of globally coupled logistic maps (GCLM) can display complex collective behaviour characterized by the formation of synchronous clusters. In the dynamical clustering regime, such systems possess a large number of coexisting attractors and might be viewed as dynamical glasses. Glass properties of GCLM in the thermodynamical limit of large system sizes NN are investigated. Replicas, representing orbits that start from various initial conditions, are introduced and distributions of their overlaps are numerically determined. We show that for fixed-field ensembles of initial conditions, as used in previous numerical studies, all attractors of the system become identical in the thermodynamical limit up to variations of order 1/N1/\sqrt{N} because the initial value of the coupling field is characterized by vanishing fluctuations, and thus replica symmetry is recovered for N→∞N\to \infty . In contrast to this, when random-field ensembles of initial conditions are chosen, replica symmetry remains broken in the thermodynamical limit.Comment: 19 pages, 18 figure

    Long transients and cluster size in globally coupled maps

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    We analyze the asymptotic states in the partially ordered phase of a system of globally coupled logistic maps. We confirm that, regardless of initial conditions, these states consist of a few clusters, and they properly belong in the ordered phase of these systems. The transient times necessary to reach the asymptotic states can be very long, especially very near the transition line separating the ordered and the coherent phases. We find that, where two clusters form, the distribution of their sizes corresponds to windows of regular or narrow-band chaotic behavior in the bifurcation diagram of a system of two degrees of freedom that describes the motion of two clusters, where the size of one cluster acts as a bifurcation parameter.Comment: To appear in Europhysics Letter

    Time delay in the Kuramoto model with bimodal frequency distribution

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    We investigate the effects of a time-delayed all-to-all coupling scheme in a large population of oscillators with natural frequencies following a bimodal distribution. The regions of parameter space corresponding to synchronized and incoherent solutions are obtained both numerically and analytically for particular frequency distributions. In particular we find that bimodality introduces a new time scale that results in a quasiperiodic disposition of the regions of incoherence.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure

    Chimera Ising Walls in Forced Nonlocally Coupled Oscillators

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    Nonlocally coupled oscillator systems can exhibit an exotic spatiotemporal structure called chimera, where the system splits into two groups of oscillators with sharp boundaries, one of which is phase-locked and the other is phase-randomized. Two examples of the chimera states are known: the first one appears in a ring of phase oscillators, and the second one is associated with the two-dimensional rotating spiral waves. In this article, we report yet another example of the chimera state that is associated with the so-called Ising walls in one-dimensional spatially extended systems, which is exhibited by a nonlocally coupled complex Ginzburg-Landau equation with external forcing.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures, to appear in Phys. Rev.

    Coherence in scale-free networks of chaotic maps

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    We study fully synchronized states in scale-free networks of chaotic logistic maps as a function of both dynamical and topological parameters. Three different network topologies are considered: (i) random scale-free topology, (ii) deterministic pseudo-fractal scale-free network, and (iii) Apollonian network. For the random scale-free topology we find a coupling strength threshold beyond which full synchronization is attained. This threshold scales as k−μk^{-\mu}, where kk is the outgoing connectivity and μ\mu depends on the local nonlinearity. For deterministic scale-free networks coherence is observed only when the coupling strength is proportional to the neighbor connectivity. We show that the transition to coherence is of first-order and study the role of the most connected nodes in the collective dynamics of oscillators in scale-free networks.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figure

    Propagation of small perturbations in synchronized oscillator networks

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    We study the propagation of a harmonic perturbation of small amplitude on a network of coupled identical phase oscillators prepared in a state of full synchronization. The perturbation is externally applied to a single oscillator, and is transmitted to the other oscillators through coupling. Numerical results and an approximate analytical treatment, valid for random and ordered networks, show that the response of each oscillator is a rather well-defined function of its distance from the oscillator where the external perturbation is applied. For small distances, the system behaves as a dissipative linear medium: the perturbation amplitude decreases exponentially with the distance, while propagating at constant speed. We suggest that the pattern of interactions may be deduced from measurements of the response of individual oscillators to perturbations applied at different nodes of the network

    The Kuramoto model with distributed shear

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    We uncover a solvable generalization of the Kuramoto model in which shears (or nonisochronicities) and natural frequencies are distributed and statistically dependent. We show that the strength and sign of this dependence greatly alter synchronization and yield qualitatively different phase diagrams. The Ott-Antonsen ansatz allows us to obtain analytical results for a specific family of joint distributions. We also derive, using linear stability analysis, general formulae for the stability border of incoherence.Comment: 6 page

    Existence of hysteresis in the Kuramoto model with bimodal frequency distributions

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    We investigate the transition to synchronization in the Kuramoto model with bimodal distributions of the natural frequencies. Previous studies have concluded that the model exhibits a hysteretic phase transition if the bimodal distribution is close to a unimodal one, due to the shallowness the central dip. Here we show that proximity to the unimodal-bimodal border does not necessarily imply hysteresis when the width, but not the depth, of the central dip tends to zero. We draw this conclusion from a detailed study of the Kuramoto model with a suitable family of bimodal distributions.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures, to appear in Physical Review
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