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1.
Phys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys ; 83(4 Pt 2): 046212, 2011 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21599275

ABSTRACT

This work presents the results of a detailed experimental study into the transition between synchronized, low-dimensional, and unsynchronized, high-dimensional dynamics using a system of coupled electronic chaotic oscillators. Novel data analysis techniques have been employed to reveal that a hyperchaotic attractor can arise from the amalgamation of two nonattracting sets. These originate from initially multistable low-dimensional attractors which experience a smooth transition from low- to high-dimensional chaotic behavior, losing stability through a bubbling bifurcation. Numerical techniques were also employed to verify and expand on the experimental results, giving evidence on the locally unstable invariant sets contained within the globally stable hyperchaotic attractor. This particular route to hyperchaos also results in the possibility of phenomena (such as unstable dimension variability) that can be a major obstruction to shadowing and predictability in chaotic systems.

2.
Phys Rev Lett ; 98(25): 254101, 2007 Jun 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17678026

ABSTRACT

We present the results of an experimental investigation of a network of nonlinear coupled oscillators which are coupled in feed-forward mode. By exploiting the nonlinear response of each oscillator near its intrinsic Hopf bifurcation point, we have found remarkable amplification of small signals over a narrow bandwidth with a large dynamic range. The effect is exploited to extract a small amplitude periodic signal from an input time series which is dominated by noise. Specifically, we have used this relatively simple experimental system to measure responses with a bandwidth of approximately 1% of the central frequency, amplifications of approximately 60 dB, and a dynamic range of approximately 80 dB and can extract signals from a time series with a signal to noise ratio of approximately -50 dB.

3.
Phys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys ; 73(4 Pt 2): 046203, 2006 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16711913

ABSTRACT

Many of the results in the theory of dynamical systems rely on the assumption of hyperbolicity. One of the possible violations of this condition is the presence of unstable dimension variability (UDV), i.e., the existence in a chaotic attractor of sets of unstable periodic orbits, each with a different number of expanding directions. It has been shown that the presence of UDV poses severe limitations to the length of time for which a numerically generated orbit can be assumed to lie close to a true trajectory of such systems (the shadowing time). In this work we propose a method to detect the presence of UDV in real systems from time series measurements. Variations in the number of expanding directions are detected by determining the local topological dimension of the unstable space for points along a trajectory on the attractor. We show for a physical system of coupled electronic oscillators that with this method it is possible to decompose attractors into subsets with different unstable dimension and from this gain insight into the times a typical trajectory spends in each region.

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