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10/2/2015Electronic Chaos1 2009 Fall Steven Wright and Amanda Baldwin Special Thanks to Mr. Dan Brunski.

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Presentation on theme: "10/2/2015Electronic Chaos1 2009 Fall Steven Wright and Amanda Baldwin Special Thanks to Mr. Dan Brunski."— Presentation transcript:

1 10/2/2015Electronic Chaos1 2009 Fall Steven Wright and Amanda Baldwin Special Thanks to Mr. Dan Brunski

2 Outline ●Motivation and History ●The Pasco Setup ●Feedback and Mapping ●Feigenbaum ●Lyapunov Exponents ●MatLab files ●Conclusions 10/2/2015Electronic Chaos2 www.nathanselikoff.com/strangeattractors/

3 Motivation ●Contained in the field on nonlinear dynamics- evolves in time ●Chaos theory offers ordered models for seemingly disorderly systems, such as: –Weather patterns –Turbulent Flow –Population dynamics –Stock Market Behavior –Traffic Flow –Nonlinear circuits 10/2/2015Electronic Chaos3

4 Chaos Circuit ●Chaotic behavior in a circuit ─Time continuous system ─Simplest circuits that exhibit chaos have a nonlinear component ●Chaotic vs Periodic behavior ─Dependent on the initial conditions ─Makes them unpredictable in the long run ●PASCO system controls initial conditions (control parameter) with a variable resistor ─Control resistance via Electronic Chaos System ─2000 steps available ─“Tap”0 = 2.5 k Ω ─ Each successive “Tap” increase ≈ 40Ω ─ Chaotic regions determined for this circuit by the bifurcation plot 10/2/2015Electronic Chaos4

5 Bifucation Plot ●We took data for tap 603-703 using 10000 data points ●Plot of our data ─Agrees with the plot of this region in the manual? (I’m now not so convinced) 10/2/2015Electronic Chaos5 For each ‘R’, every local maxima of the waveform (x vs. t)—Xmax—is plotted Number of points for each ‘R’ corresponds to the period of the waveform and number of loops on phase portrait –The white areas are periodic –Chaotic regions theoretically have an infinite number of points and are the darker regions

6 Differential Equation ●Dynamical Equation of an Electronic Circuit ─Dependent on time t ●N-First order equations ●Autonomous ODE ─How large must N be for chaos to exist for this circuit ●N ≥ 3 is sufficient ●Chaos and periodic solutions are available ●General form of the equation for the circuit Where α,β,γ, and C are real constants; D(x) is the nonlinear function of the nonlinear component in the circuit ● This is known as the jerk equation because it is a 3 rd order differential dependent on time

7 PASCO Chaos Circuit ●D(x) is the nonlinear component ●Node analysis equations come from Kirchoff’s current law ●Chaos controlled by potentiometer 10/2/2015Electronic Chaos7

8 The nonlinear element D(x) ●The nonlinear element is described by the equation: For all positive values of x this returns D = 0 For all negative values of x this returns D = -6 * x 2 Diodes & Op Amp D(x)  Plot of experimental measurement of D(x)

9 Chaotic Attractor ●The number of loops around the basin of attraction corresponds to the period of the waveform described by the differential equation ●We can conclude: ─For R = 76.35 kΩ, Xmax = -0.1.1932 the circuit is periodic ─For R = 78.62 kΩ, Xmax = -0.099818 the circuit is chaotic 10/2/2015Electronic Chaos9 Phase Space Plots {F[x]; F = dx/dt}

10 Concepts of Chaos Theory Feigenbaum‘s number let Da n = a n - a n-1 be the width between successive period doublings Da n+1 n anan Da dndn 13.0 23.4494900.4494904.7515 33.5440900.0946004.6562 43.5644070.0203174.6684 53.5687590.004352 3.56994564.6692 lim n®¥ d n » 4.669202 is called the Feigenbaum´s number d Alexander BrunnerChaos and Stability

11 Feigenbaum Numbers ●The limit δ is a universal property when the function f (α,x) has a quadratic maximum ●It is also true for two-dimensional maps ●The result has been confirmed for several cases (First found by Mitchell Feigenbaum in the 1970s) ●Chaotic systems with a single quadratic maximum undergo bifurcations, or period doubling similar to the logistic map ●Every bifurcation level can be related to the next by the limiting constant δ ●Since such chaotic systems bifurcate at the same rate, Feigenbaum's constant can be used to predict if and when chaos will arise.

12 Lyapunov Exponents Gives a measure for the predictability of a dynamic system –characterizes the rate of separation of infinitesimally close trajectories –Describes the avg rate which predictability is lost Calculated by similar means as eigenvalues of the Jacobian matrix J 0 (x 0 ) Usually Calculate the Maximal Lyapunov Exponent –Gives the best indication of predictability –Positive value usually taken as an indication that the system is chaotic – is the separation of the trajectories 10/2/2015Electronic Chaos12

13 Concepts of Chaos Theory Lyapunov Exponents 1 2 Alexander BrunnerChaos and Stability

14 Application to the Logistic Map a > 0 means chaos and a < 0 indicates nonchaotic behaviour Alexander BrunnerChaos and Stability a a < 0

15 10/2/2015Electronic Chaos15 ●Script Files ─2008S-1DPlots displays a series of interesting plots wrt x and the derivatives ─2008S-ElectronicBifurcation looks for local maxima of data series and plots vs resistance in kΩ ─2008S-ElectronicSingleTap has 4 plots ●Moving wave ●Phase plot ●Poincare section ●Phase plot ●Movies ─In script files, set “savemovie” option to true ─Saves each frame sequentially in 125 dpi tif file ─Use mencoder to turn tif files into a movie Matlab

16 10/2/2015Electronic Chaos16 Conclusion Chaotic circuits can be created using simple op-amps to create nonlinear components Very small changes in the resistance can easily shift the circuit from stable to chaotic Bifurcation diagrams can show us the regions of stability and chaos for a given resistance and Xmax Phase space plots of the circuit display an attractor, and give us regions of stability or chaos for x and dx/dt Lyapunov exponents help us determine the rate at which predictability of the circuit is lost, i.e. where chaos begins Feigenbaum number gives us an idea if and when chaos will arise, as a result of the period doubling on the bifurcation diagram

17 10/2/2015Electronic Chaos17 ●Electronic Chaos System 1.0 User’s Guide, by Ken Kiers ●Precision Measurements of a Simple Chaotic Circuit, by Ken Kiers, Dory Schmidt, and J,C, Sprott ●Chaos amnd Time-Series Analysis, by J.C. Sprott, Oxford Press 2006 ●Matlab Notes and Commentary, by Dan Brunski References


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