Resonant Solitary States in Complex Networks (2401.06483v3)
Abstract: Partially synchronized solitary states occur frequently when a synchronized system of networked oscillators is perturbed locally. Several asymptotic states of different frequencies can coexist at the same node. Here, we reveal the mechanism behind this multistability: additional solitary frequencies arise from the coupling between network modes and the solitary oscillator's frequency, leading to significant energy transfer. This can cause the solitary node's frequency to resonate with a Laplacian eigenvalue. We analyze which network structures enable this resonance and explain longstanding numerical observations. Another solitary state is characterized by the effective decoupling of the synchronized network and the solitary node at the natural frequency. Our framework unifies the description of solitary states near and far from resonance, allowing to predict the behavior of complex networks.
- S. H. Strogatz, Physica D: Nonlinear Phenomena 143, 1 (2000).
- A. Bergen and D. Hill, IEEE Transactions on Power Apparatus and Systems PAS-100, 25 (1981).
- B. Ermentrout, Journal of Mathematical Biology 29, 571 (1991).
- UCTE, “Final report system disturbance on 4 november 2006,” https://eepublicdownloads.entsoe.eu/clean-documents/pre2015/publications/ce/otherreports/Final-Report-20070130.pdf, accessed: 2022-12-19 17:25.
- P.-J. Menck, How wires shape volumes, Ph.D. thesis, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Fakultät I (2014).
- J. Gao and K. Efstathiou, Phys. Rev. E 98, 042201 (2018).
- See Supplemental Material at [URL will be inserted by publisher] for animations of the dynamics of an exemplary complex network; an in-depth, self-contained derivation of our main results; an outline of several possible generalizations; more examples and their comparison; and details of the networks used.
- L. Halekotte and U. Feudel, Scientific Reports 10, 11783 (2020).
- D. Witthaut and M. Timme, New Journal of Physics 14, 083036 (2012).
- J. Niehues, “Revelations,” https://gitlab.pik-potsdam.de/jakobn/revelations (2023).
Collections
Sign up for free to add this paper to one or more collections.
Paper Prompts
Sign up for free to create and run prompts on this paper using GPT-5.