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Phys. Rev. E 63, 066114 (2001) [10 pages]

Stochastic dynamics in a two-dimensional oscillator near a saddle-node bifurcation

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M. E. Inchiosa*, V. In, and A. R. Bulsara
Space and Naval Warfare Systems Center San Diego, Code D363, 49590 Lassing Road, San Diego, California 92152-6147

K. Wiesenfeld§
School of Physics, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, Georgia 30332

T. Heath**
Georgia Tech Research Institute, 7220 Richardson Rd., Smyrma, Georgia 30080

M. H. Choi††
School of Physics, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, Georgia 30332

Received 22 November 2000; published 22 May 2001

We study the oscillator equations describing a particular class of nonlinear amplifier, exemplified in this work by a two-junction superconducting quantum interference device. This class of dynamic system is described by a potential energy function that can admit minima (corresponding to stable solutions of the dynamic equations), or “running states” wherein the system is biased so that the potential minima disappear and the solutions display spontaneous oscillations. Just beyond the onset of the spontaneous oscillations, the system is known to show significantly enhanced sensitivity to very weak magnetic signals. The global phase space structure allows us to apply a center manifold technique to approximate analytically the oscillatory behavior just past the (saddle-node) bifurcation and compute the oscillation period, which obeys standard scaling laws. In this regime, the dynamics can be represented by an “integrate-fire” model drawn from the computational neuroscience repertoire; in fact, we obtain an “interspike interval” probability density function and an associated power spectral density (computed via Renewal theory) that agree very well with the results obtained via numerical simulations. Notably, driving the system with one or more time sinusoids produces a noise-lowering injection locking effect and/or heterodyning.

© 2001 The American Physical Society

URL:
http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevE.63.066114
DOI:
10.1103/PhysRevE.63.066114
PACS:
05.45.-a, 05.40.Ca, 02.50.Ey, 02.30.Hq

*Electronic address: inchiosa@spawar.navy.mil

Electronic address: visarath@spawar.navy.mil

Electronic address: bulsara@spawar.navy.mil

§Electronic address: kw2@prism.gatech.edu

**Electronic address: ted.heath@gtri.gatech.edu

††Electronic address: Mee.Choi@physics.gatech.edu