We explore identical Rössler systems organized into two equally sized groups, among which differing positive and negative in- and out-coupling strengths are allowed. With this asymmetric coupling, we analyze patterns in the phase dynamics that coexist with chaotic amplitudes. We specifically investigate traveling phase waves where the oscillators settle on a new rhythm different from their own.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys
June 2015
We study two intertwined globally coupled networks of noisy Kuramoto phase oscillators that have the same natural frequency but differ in their perception of the mean field and their contribution to it. Such a give-and-take mechanism is given by asymmetric in- and out-coupling strengths which can be both positive and negative. We uncover in this minimal network of networks intriguing patterns of discordance, where the ensemble splits into two clusters separated by a constant phase lag.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys
November 2013
We study Kuramoto phase oscillators with temporal fluctuations in the frequencies. The infinite-dimensional system can be reduced in a Gaussian approximation to two first-order differential equations. This yields a solution for the time-dependent order parameter, which characterizes the synchronization between the oscillators.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys
May 2012
We study networks of noisy phase oscillators whose nodes are characterized by random degrees counting the number of their connections. Both these degrees and the natural frequencies of the oscillators are distributed according to a given probability density. Replacing the randomly connected network by an all-to-all coupled network with weighted edges allows us to formulate the dynamics of a single oscillator coupled to the mean field and to derive the corresponding Fokker-Planck equation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAn 18-year-old male, castrated Domestic Shorthaired cat was presented with the complaint of acute severe lameness of the left pelvic limb. There was no history of trauma, apart from a distal physeal left femoral fracture that had been repaired 17 years previously. Radiology revealed a displaced distal metaphyseal femoral fracture with marked areas of bone lysis and periosteal proliferations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF