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Phase Transitions in Coupled Nonlinear Oscillators

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Phase Transitions in Coupled Nonlinear Oscillators

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    1. Phase Transitions in Coupled Nonlinear Oscillators Tanya Leise Amherst College tleise@amherst.edu Materials available at www.amherst.edu/~tleise

    2. Single Finger Oscillation

    4. Bimanual Oscillations

    5. Bimanual Oscillations

    6. Bimanual Oscillations Increasing frequency:

    8. Developing a Model Goals: To develop a minimal model that can reproduce these qualitative features To gain insight into underlying neuromuscular system (how both flexibility and stability can be achieved) Nature uses only the longest threads to weave her pattern, so each small piece of the fabric reveals the organization of the entire tapestry. ?R.P. Feynman

    10. Differential equation models

    11. Nonlinear Oscillator Include nonlinear damping term(s) to yield desired phase shifts as ? increases Obtain self-sustaining oscillations if use negative linear damping term Hybrid oscillator (Van der Pol/Rayleigh): Seek stable oscillatory solution of form

    15. Coupled Nonlinear Oscillators

    16. Bimanual Oscillatory Solutions

    18. Stability Analysis

    19. Stability of the out-of-phase motion depends on the sign of the eigenvalue Increasing frequency ? beyond a critical value ?cr leads to change in stability of out-of-phase motion, triggering switch to in-phase motion Loss of Stability Leads to Phase Transition

    20. Energy Well Analogy Potential function V(?) defined via Minima of V correspond to stable phases Maxima of V correspond to unstable phases

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