It has been suggested by experimentalists that a weakly nonlinear analysis of the recently introduced equations of motion for the nematic electroconvection by M. Treiber and L. Kramer [Phys. Rev. E 58, 1973 (1998)] has the potential to reproduce the dynamics of the zigzag-type extended spatiotemporal chaos and localized solutions observed near onset in experiments [M. Dennin, D. S. Cannell, and G. Ahlers, Phys. Rev. E 57, 638 (1998); J. T. Gleeson (private communication)]. In this paper, we study a complex spatiotemporal pattern, identified as spatiotemporal chaos, that bifurcates at the onset from a spatially uniform solution of a system of globally coupled complex Ginzburg-Landau equations governing the weakly nonlinear evolution of four traveling wave envelopes. The Ginzburg-Landau system can be derived directly from the weak electrolyte model for electroconvection in nematic liquid crystals when the primary instability is a Hopf bifurcation to oblique traveling rolls. The chaotic nature of the pattern and the resemblance to the observed experimental spatiotemporal chaos in the electroconvection of nematic liquid crystals are confirmed through a combination of techniques including the Karhunen-Loeve decomposition, time-series analysis of the amplitudes of the dominant modes, statistical descriptions, and normal form theory, showing good agreement between theory and experiments.
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Bull Math Biol
January 2025
Department of Mathematics, Vivekananda College, Kolkata, West Bengal, 700063, India.
The extinction of species is a major threat to the biodiversity. Allee effects are strongly linked to population extinction vulnerability. Emerging ecological evidence from numerous ecosystems reveals that the Allee effect, which is brought on by two or more processes, can work on a single species concurrently.
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January 2025
School of Mathematical & Computer Sciences, Heriot-Watt University, EH14 4AS Edinburgh, United Kingdom.
Time-evolving graphs arise frequently when modeling complex dynamical systems such as social networks, traffic flow, and biological processes. Developing techniques to identify and analyze communities in these time-varying graph structures is an important challenge. In this work, we generalize existing spectral clustering algorithms from static to dynamic graphs using canonical correlation analysis to capture the temporal evolution of clusters.
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January 2025
Department of Physics, Tohoku University, Sendai 980-8578, Japan.
An Ott-Antonsen reduced M-population of Kuramoto-Sakaguchi oscillators is investigated, focusing on the influence of the phase-lag parameter α on the collective dynamics. For oscillator populations coupled on a ring, we obtained a wide variety of spatiotemporal patterns, including coherent states, traveling waves, partially synchronized states, modulated states, and incoherent states. Back-and-forth transitions between these states are found, which suggest metastability.
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December 2024
Centre for Mathematical Biology and Ecology, Department of Mathematics, Jadavpur University, Kolkata 700032, India.
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View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Rev E
October 2024
Max Planck Institute for Dynamics and Self-Organization, Göttingen, Germany; Institute for the Dynamics of Complex Systems, Georg-August-Universität Göttingen, Göttingen, Germany; and German Center for Cardiovascular Research (DZHK e.V., Partner Site Niedersachsen, Göttingen, Germany.
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