Coupled distinct arrays of nonlinear oscillators have been shown to have a
regime of high frequency, or ultra-harmonic, oscillations that are at multiples
of the natural frequency of individual oscillators. The coupled array
architectures generate an in-phase high-frequency state by coupling with an
array in an anti-phase state. The underlying mechanism for the creation and
stability of the ultra-harmonic oscillations is analyzed. A class of
inter-array coupling is shown to create a stable, in-phase oscillation having
frequency that increases linearly with the number of oscillators, but with an
amplitude that stays fairly constant. The analysis of the theory is illustrated
by numerical simulation of coupled arrays of Stuart-Landau limit cycle
oscillators.Comment: 24 pages, 9 figures, accepted to Phys. Rev. E, in pres