THE EFFECTS OF SYMMETRY BREAKING IN CHUA'S CIRCUIT AND RELATED PIECEWISE-LINEAR DYNAMICAL SYSTEMS

Author(s):  
CLAUS KAHLERT
1993 ◽  
Vol 03 (04) ◽  
pp. 963-979 ◽  
Author(s):  
CLAUS KAHLERT

The behavior of transfer and return maps in the intermediate region of Chua's circuit and related systems undergoes a number of changes as the symmetry of the dynamics is broken, i.e., the separating planes are moved away from symmetric positions. We employ the technique of maps induced by the flow of the system and construct the critical curves for the maps in the intermediate region of state space. The influence of a broken symmetry on the critical curves and the flow is discussed in depth. We demonstrate that any breaking of symmetry potentially weakens and eventually destroys the chaos producing mechanisms.


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.


2015 ◽  
Vol 82 (3) ◽  
pp. 1159-1175 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jaume Llibre ◽  
Douglas D. Novaes ◽  
Marco A. Teixeira

2005 ◽  
Vol 15 (01) ◽  
pp. 83-98 ◽  
Author(s):  
QIUDONG WANG ◽  
ALI OKSASOGLU

In this paper, we discuss a new mechanism for chaos in light of some new developments in the theory of dynamical systems. It was shown in [Wang & Young, 2002b] that strange attractors occur when an autonomous system undergoing a generic Hopf bifurcation is subjected to a weak external forcing that is periodically turned on and off. For illustration purposes, we apply these results to the Chua's system. Derivation of conditions for chaos along with the results of numerical simulations are presented.


2013 ◽  
Vol 23 (04) ◽  
pp. 1330010 ◽  
Author(s):  
JEAN-MARC GINOUX ◽  
JAUME LLIBRE ◽  
LEON O. CHUA

The aim of this work is to extend Benoît's theorem for the generic existence of "canards" solutions in singularly perturbed dynamical systems of dimension three with one fast variable to those of dimension four. Then, it is established that this result can be found according to the Flow Curvature Method. Applications to Chua's cubic model of dimension three and four enable to state the existence of "canards" solutions in such systems.


1995 ◽  
Vol 05 (01) ◽  
pp. 271-273
Author(s):  
M. KOCH ◽  
R. TETZLAFF ◽  
D. WOLF

We studied the power spectrum of the normalized voltage across the capacitor parallel to a piecewise-linear resistor of Chua’s circuit in the “chaos-chaos intermittency” state [Anishchenko et al., 1992]. The investigations included various initial conditions and circuit parameter values without and with external excitation. In all cases we found spectra showing a 1/ω2-decay over more than four decades.


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.


2015 ◽  
Vol 25 (06) ◽  
pp. 1550090 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shihui Fu ◽  
Qishao Lu ◽  
Xiangying Meng

Chua's circuit, an archetypal example of nonsmooth dynamical systems, exhibits mostly discontinuous bifurcations. More complex dynamical phenomena of Chua's circuit are presented here due to discontinuity-induced bifurcations. Some new kinds of classical bifurcations are revealed and analyzed, including the coexistence of two classical bifurcations and bifurcations of equilibrium manifolds. The local dynamical behavior of the boundary equilibrium points located on switch boundaries is found to be determined jointly by the Jacobian matrices evaluated before and after switching. Some new discontinuous bifurcations are also observed, such as the coexistence of two discontinuous and one classical bifurcation.


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