Dynamical mechanism behind ghosts unveiled in a map complexification

Publication date

2022-03-01



Abstract

Complex systems such as ecosystems, electronic circuits, lasers, or chemical reactions can be modelled by dynamical systems which typically experience bifurcations. It is known that transients become extremely long close to bifurcations, also following well-defined scaling laws as the bifurcation parameter gets closer the bifurcation value. For saddle-node bifurcations, the dynamical mechanism responsible for these delays, tangible at the real numbers phase space (so-called ghosts), occurs at the complex phase space. To study this phenomenon we have complexified an ecological map with a saddle-node bifurcation. We have investigated the complex (as opposed to real) dynamics after this bifurcation, identifying the fundamental mechanism causing such long delays, given by the presence of two repellers in the complex space. Such repellers appear to be extremely close to the real line, thus forming a narrow channel close to the two new fixed points and responsible for the slow passage of the orbits. We analytically provide the relation between the well-known inverse square-root scaling law of transient times and the multipliers of these repellers. We finally prove that the same phenomenon occurs for more general i.e. non-necessarily polynomial, models. © 2021 Elsevier Ltd

Document Type

Article


Submitted version

Language

English

Pages

13 p.

Publisher

Elsevier Ltd

Published in

Chaos, Solitons and Fractals

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CRM Articles [714]