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Chimera states are chaotic transients

Matthias Wolfrum and Oleh E. Omel’chenko
Phys. Rev. E 84, 015201(R) – Published 8 July 2011

Abstract

Spatiotemporal chaos and turbulence are universal concepts for the explanation of irregular behavior in various physical systems. Recently, a remarkable new phenomenon, called “chimera states,” has been described, where in a spatially homogeneous system, regions of irregular incoherent motion coexist with regular synchronized motion, forming a self-organized pattern in a population of nonlocally coupled oscillators. Whereas most previous studies of chimera states focused their attention on the case of large numbers of oscillators employing the thermodynamic limit of infinitely many oscillators, here we investigate the properties of chimera states in populations of finite size using concepts from deterministic chaos. Our calculations of the Lyapunov spectrum show that the incoherent motion, which is described in the thermodynamic limit as a stationary behavior, in finite size systems appears as weak spatially extensive chaos. Moreover, for sufficiently small populations the chimera states reveal their transient nature: after a certain time span we observe a sudden collapse of the chimera pattern and a transition to the completely coherent state. Our results indicate that chimera states can be considered as chaotic transients, showing the same properties as type-II supertransients in coupled map lattices.

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  • Received 8 April 2011

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevE.84.015201

©2011 American Physical Society

Authors & Affiliations

Matthias Wolfrum1 and Oleh E. Omel’chenko1,2

  • 1Weierstrass Institute for Applied Analysis and Stochastics, Mohrenstrasse 39, DE-10117 Berlin, Germany
  • 2Institute of Mathematics, National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, Tereshchenkivska Str. 3, UA-01601 Kyiv, Ukraine

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Issue

Vol. 84, Iss. 1 — July 2011

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