A Note on the Linear Stability of the Steady State of a Nonlinear Renewal Equation with a Parameter

2020 ◽  
Vol 51 (3) ◽  
pp. 879-887
Author(s):  
Suman Kumar Tumuluri
1985 ◽  
Vol 32 (3) ◽  
pp. 1588-1595 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. M. Narducci ◽  
J. R. Tredicce ◽  
L. A. Lugiato ◽  
N. B. Abraham ◽  
D. K. Bandy

2020 ◽  
Vol 102 (4) ◽  
pp. 2057-2075
Author(s):  
Ningyu Liu ◽  
Huajiang Ouyang

AbstractThe friction-induced vibration of a novel 5-DoF (degree-of-freedom) mass-on-oscillating-belt model considering multiple types of nonlinearities is studied. The first type of nonlinearity in the system is the nonlinear contact stiffness, the second is the non-smooth behaviour including stick, slip and separation, and the third is the geometrical nonlinearity brought about by the moving-load feature of the mass slider on the rigid belt. Both the linear stability of the system and the nonlinear steady-state responses are investigated, and rich dynamic behaviours of the system are revealed. The results of numerical study indicate the necessity of the transient dynamic analysis in the study of friction-induced-vibration problems as the linear stability analysis fails to detect the occurrence of self-excited vibration when two stable solutions coexist in the system. The bifurcation behaviour of the steady-state responses of the system versus some parameters is determined. Additionally, the significant effects of each type of nonlinearity on the linear stability and nonlinear steady-state responses of the system are discovered, which underlie the necessity to take multiple types of nonlinearities into account in the research of friction-induced vibration and noise.


2019 ◽  
Vol 31 (5) ◽  
pp. 871-917 ◽  
Author(s):  
ANDREAS BUTTENSCHOEN ◽  
THEODORE KOLOKOLNIKOV ◽  
MICHAEL J. WARD ◽  
JUNCHENG WEI

In a singularly perturbed limit, we analyse the existence and linear stability of steady-state hotspot solutions for an extension of the 1-D three-component reaction-diffusion (RD) system formulated and studied numerically in Jones et. al. [Math. Models. Meth. Appl. Sci., 20, Suppl., (2010)], which models urban crime with police intervention. In our extended RD model, the field variables are the attractiveness field for burglary, the criminal population density and the police population density. Our model includes a scalar parameter that determines the strength of the police drift towards maxima of the attractiveness field. For a special choice of this parameter, we recover the ‘cops-on-the-dots’ policing strategy of Jones et. al., where the police mimic the drift of the criminals towards maxima of the attractiveness field. For our extended model, the method of matched asymptotic expansions is used to construct 1-D steady-state hotspot patterns as well as to derive nonlocal eigenvalue problems (NLEPs) that characterise the linear stability of these hotspot steady states to ${\cal O}$(1) timescale instabilities. For a cops-on-the-dots policing strategy, we prove that a multi-hotspot steady state is linearly stable to synchronous perturbations of the hotspot amplitudes. Alternatively, for asynchronous perturbations of the hotspot amplitudes, a hybrid analytical–numerical method is used to construct linear stability phase diagrams in the police vs. criminal diffusivity parameter space. In one particular region of these phase diagrams, the hotspot steady states are shown to be unstable to asynchronous oscillatory instabilities in the hotspot amplitudes that arise from a Hopf bifurcation. Within the context of our model, this provides a parameter range where the effect of a cops-on-the-dots policing strategy is to only displace crime temporally between neighbouring spatial regions. Our hybrid approach to study the NLEPs combines rigorous spectral results with a numerical parameterisation of any Hopf bifurcation threshold. For the cops-on-the-dots policing strategy, our linear stability predictions for steady-state hotspot patterns are confirmed from full numerical PDE simulations of the three-component RD system.


1984 ◽  
Vol 142 ◽  
pp. 451-466 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. C. Robinson ◽  
P. G. Saffman

The three-dimensional linear stability of a rectilinear vortex of elliptical cross-section existing as a steady state in an irrotational straining field is studied numerically in the case of finite strain. It is shown that the instability predicted analytically for weak strain persists for finite strain and that the weak-strain results continue to be quantitatively valid for finite strain. The dependence of the growth rates of the unstable modes on the strain and the axial-disturbance wavelength is discussed. It is also shown that a three-dimensional instability is always more unstable than a two-dimensional instability in the range of parameters of most interest.


2010 ◽  
Vol 40 (3) ◽  
pp. 568-581 ◽  
Author(s):  
F. J. Poulin

Abstract This article aims to advance the understanding of inherent randomness in geophysical fluids by considering the particular example of baroclinic shear flows that are spatially uniform in the horizontal directions and aperiodic in time. The time variability of the shear is chosen to be the Kubo oscillator, which is a family of time-dependent bounded noise that is oscillatory in nature with various degrees of stochasticity. The author analyzed the linear stability of a wide range of temporally periodic and aperiodic shears with a zero and nonzero mean to get a more complete understanding of the effect of oscillations in shear flows in the context of the two-layer quasigeostrophic Phillips model. It is determined that the parametric mode, which exists in the periodic limit, also exists in the range of small and moderate stochasticities but vanishes in highly erratic flows. Moreover, random variations weaken the effects of periodicity and yield growth rates more similar to that of the time-averaged steady-state analog. This signifies that the periodic shear flows possess the most extreme case of stabilization and destabilization and are thus anomalous. In the limit of an f plane, the linear stability problem is solved exactly to reveal that individual solutions to the linear dynamics with time-dependent baroclinic shear have growth rates that are equal to that of the time-averaged steady state. This implies that baroclinic shear flows with zero means are linearly stable in that they do not grow exponentially in time. This means that the stochastic mode that was found to exist in the Mathieu equation does not arise in this model. However, because the perturbations grow algebraically, the aperiodic baroclinic shear on an f plane can give rise to nonlinear instabilities.


2017 ◽  
Vol 28 (6) ◽  
pp. 1015-1055 ◽  
Author(s):  
V. ROTTSCHÄFER ◽  
J. C. TZOU ◽  
M.J. WARD

For certain singularly perturbed two-component reaction–diffusion systems, the bifurcation diagram of steady-state spike solutions is characterized by a saddle-node behaviour in terms of some parameter in the system. For some such systems, such as the Gray–Scott model, a spike self-replication behaviour is observed as the parameter varies across the saddle-node point. We demonstrate and analyse a qualitatively new type of transition as a parameter is slowly decreased below the saddle node value, which is characterized by a finite-time blow-up of the spike solution. More specifically, we use a blend of asymptotic analysis, linear stability theory, and full numerical computations to analyse a wide variety of dynamical instabilities, and ultimately finite-time blow-up behaviour, for localized spike solutions that occur as a parameter β is slowly ramped in time below various linear stability and existence thresholds associated with steady-state spike solutions. The transition or route to an ultimate finite-time blow-up can include spike nucleation, spike annihilation, or spike amplitude oscillation, depending on the specific parameter regime. Our detailed analysis of the existence and linear stability of multi-spike patterns, through the analysis of an explicitly solvable non-local eigenvalue problem, provides a theoretical guide for predicting which transition will be realized. Finally, we analyse the blow-up profile for a shadow limit of the reaction–diffusion system. For the resulting non-local scalar parabolic problem, we derive an explicit expression for the blow-up rate near the parameter range where blow-up is predicted. This blow-up rate is confirmed with full numerical simulations of the full PDE. Moreover, we analyse the linear stability of this solution that blows up in finite time.


This paper explores the basic mechanism underlying the remarkable phenomenon that a forcing excitation stationary in character and sustained at near resonance in a shallow channel of uniform water depth generates a non-stationary response in the form of a sequential upstream emission of solitary waves. Adopting the forced Korteweg-de Vries (fKdV) model and using two of its steady forced solitary wave solutions as primary flows, the stability of these two transcritical steady motions is investigated, and their bifurcation diagrams relating these solutions to other stationary solutions determined, with the forcing held fixed. The corresponding forcing functions are characterized by a velocity parameter for one, and an amplitude parameter for the other of the steadily moving excitations. The linear stability analysis is first pursued for small arbitrary perturbations of the primary flow, leading to a singular, non-self-adjoint eigenvalue problem, which is solved by applying techniques of matched asymptotic expansions with suitable multiscales for singular perturbations, about the isolated bifurcation points of the parametric space pertaining to the stationary perturbations. The eigenvalues and eigenfunctions are then obtained for the full range of the parameters by numerical continuation of the eigenvalues branching off from the stationary-perturbation solutions that were determined by the local analysis. A highly accurate numerical scheme is developed as required for this purpose. The linear stability analysis identifies three categories of evolution of infinitesimal disturbances superimposed to the steady state; they occur in three different parametric regimes. The first, called periodical bifurcating regime, is characterized by complex eigenvalues, with a real part much smaller than the imaginary part, signifying that small departures from the steady state will oscillate with an amplitude growing at a slow exponential rate. In the second regime, called the aperiodical bifurcating regime, the eigenvalues are purely real, implying that small departures from the steady state grow exponentially. For the third regime, linear stability theory is unable to find any eigenvalue (including zero) to exist. In this last case, however, a nonlinear analysis based on the functional hamiltonian formulation is possible, with the hamiltonian conserved for forcings of constant velocity, and the steady state is shown to be stable. For this reason, this regime will be called the stable supercritical regime. Finally, extensive numerical simulations using various finite difference schemes are carried out to find how the solution evolves once the instability of the solution manifests, with results fully confirming the predictions obtained analytically for the various regimes. The numerical simulations show that the instability in the periodical bifurcating regime, for the type of forcings considered, causes the steady solutions to evolve into the phenomenon of periodical production of upstream-advancing solitary waves.


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