THE THEORY OF CONFINORS IN CHUA'S CIRCUIT: ACCURATE ANALYSIS OF BIFURCATIONS AND ATTRACTORS

Author(s):  
RENÉ LOZI ◽  
SHIGEHIRO USHIKI
1993 ◽  
Vol 03 (02) ◽  
pp. 333-361 ◽  
Author(s):  
RENÉ LOZI ◽  
SHIGEHIRO USHIKI

We apply the new concept of confinors and anti-confinors, initially defined for ordinary differential equations constrained on a cusp manifold, to the equations governing the circuit dynamics of Chua’s circuit. We especially emphasize some properties of the confinors of Chua’s equation with respect to the patterns in the time waveforms. Some of these properties lead to a very accurate numerical method for the computation of the half-Poincaré maps which reveal the precise structures of Chua’s strange attractors and the exact bifurcation diagrams with the help of a special sequence of change of coordinates. We also recall how such accurate methods allow the reliable numerical observation of the coexistence of three distinct chaotic attractors for at least one choice of the parameters. Chua’s equation seemssurprisingly rich in very new behaviors not yet reported even in other dynamical systems. The application of the theory of confinors to Chua’s equation and the use of sequences of Taylor’s coordinates could give new perspectives to the study of dynamical systems by uncovering very unusual behaviors not yet reported in the literature. The main paradox here is that the theory of confinors, which could appear as a theory of rough analysis of the phase portrait of Chua’s equation, leads instead to a very accurate analysis of this phase portrait.


1993 ◽  
Vol 03 (02) ◽  
pp. 645-668 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. N. SHARKOVSKY ◽  
YU. MAISTRENKO ◽  
PH. DEREGEL ◽  
L. O. CHUA

In this paper, we consider an infinite-dimensional extension of Chua's circuit (Fig. 1) obtained by replacing the left portion of the circuit composed of the capacitance C2 and the inductance L by a lossless transmission line as shown in Fig. 2. As we shall see, if the remaining capacitance C1 is equal to zero, the dynamics of this so-called time-delayed Chua's circuit can be reduced to that of a scalar nonlinear difference equation. After deriving the corresponding 1-D map, it will be possible to determine without any approximation the analytical equation of the stability boundaries of cycles of every period n. Since the stability region is nonempty for each n, this proves rigorously that the time-delayed Chua's circuit exhibits the "period-adding" phenomenon where every two consecutive cycles are separated by a chaotic region.


1994 ◽  
Vol 04 (02) ◽  
pp. 117-159 ◽  
Author(s):  
LEON O. CHUA

More than 200 papers, two special issues (Journal of Circuits, Systems, and Computers, March, June, 1993, and IEEE Trans. on Circuits and Systems, vol. 40, no. 10, October, 1993), an International Workshop on Chua’s Circuit: chaotic phenomena and applica tions at NOLTA’93, and a book (edited by R.N. Madan, World Scientific, 1993) on Chua’s circuit have been published since its inception a decade ago. This review paper attempts to present an overview of these timely publications, almost all within the last six months, and to identify four milestones of this very active research area. An important milestone is the recent fabrication of a monolithic Chua’s circuit. The robustness of this IC chip demonstrates that an array of Chua’s circuits can also be fabricated into a monolithic chip, thereby opening the floodgate to many unconventional applications in information technology, synergetics, and even music. The second milestone is the recent global unfolding of Chua’s circuit, obtained by adding a linear resistor in series with the inductor to obtain a canonical Chua’s circuit— now generally referred to as Chua’s oscillator. This circuit is most significant because it is structurally the simplest (it contains only 6 circuit elements) but dynamically the most complex among all nonlinear circuits and systems described by a 21-parameter family of continuous odd-symmetric piecewise-linear vector fields. The third milestone is the recent discovery of several important new phenomena in Chua’s circuits, e.g., stochastic resonance, chaos-chaos type intermittency, 1/f noise spectrum, etc. These new phenomena could have far-reaching theoretical and practical significance. The fourth milestone is the theoretical and experimental demonstration that Chua’s circuit can be easily controlled from a chaotic regime to a prescribed periodic or constant orbit, or it can be synchronized with 2 or more identical Chua’s circuits, operating in an oscillatory, or a chaotic regime. These recent breakthroughs have ushered in a new era where chaos is deliberately created and exploited for unconventional applications, e.g. secure communication.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Irina A. Prikhodko ◽  
Anastasiia D. Skakun ◽  
Victor B. Vtorov ◽  
Egor A. Vasiliev

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