Duffing oscillator
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Curator: Dr. Takashi Kanamaru, Kogakuin University, Japan
,
,
,
, and
. By assembling the Poincaré sections of a trajectory for different phase
, the attractor of Duffing oscillator changes periodically (see also Fig.7).Duffing oscillator is an example of a periodically forced oscillator with a nonlinear elasticity, written as
- (1)
,
where the damping constant obeys
,
and it is also known as a simple model which yields chaos, as well as van der Pol oscillator.
Contents |
Physical meaning
For
, the Duffing oscillator can be interpreted as a forced oscillator with a spring whose restoring force is written as
as shown in Fig.2. When
, this spring is called a hardening spring, and, when
, it is called a softening spring although this interpretation is valid only for small
(Thompson and Stewart, 2002).
For
, the Duffing oscillator describes the dynamics of a point mass in a double well potential, and it can be regarded as a model of a periodically forced steel beam which is deflected toward the two magnets as shown in Fig.3 (Moon and Holmes, 1979; Guckenheimer and Holmes, 1983; Ott, 2002). It is known that chaotic motions can be observed in this case (see below).
Analysis
The unforced system
In this section, the dynamics of the unforced system (
) is examined.
When there is no damping (
), the Duffing equation can be integrated as
.
Therefore, in this case, the Duffing equation is a Hamiltonian system. The shape of
for
is shown in Fig.4, and it can be observed that
is a single-well potential for
, and it is a double-well potential for
.
The trajectory of
moves on the surface of
keeping
constant.
When
,
satisfies
,
therefore, the trajectory of
moves on the surface of
so that
decreases until
converges to one of the equilibria where
as shown in Fig.4.
For
,
, and
,
the only equilibrium is
,
and
satisfies
-
if and only if
,
-
and
for
.
Therefore,
is a Lyapunov function
and
is globally asymptotically stable in this case.
On the other hand, for
,
, and
, there are three equilibria as shown in Fig.4, two of which are at the bottoms of
and one of which is at its peak.
In this case, almost all the initial conditions converge to one of the equilibria at the bottoms, except for the initial conditions on the stable manifold of the equilibrium at the peak.
The equilibria of the Duffing oscillator for
can be obtained by substituting
to eq. (1), namely,
.
Therefore, the point
is always an equilibrium. Moreover, when
, two equilibria
appear. The stability of these equilibria can be understood by analyzing the eigenvalues of the Jacobian matrix of the equation. Equation (1) for
can be rewritten as
,
and the Jacobian matrix
of the righthand side is calculated as
.
Therefore, the eigenvalues of
for the equilibrium
is
,
and it is found that this equilibrium is stable for
, and unstable for
. On the other hand, the eigenvalues of the equilibria
are
,
and it is found that these equilibria are stable for
and
, and
unstable for
and
.
The weakly forced system: nonlinear resonance
Here we consider the response of the Duffing oscillator to a weak periodic forcing. First, by applying transformations
,
,
, and
to eq.(1), we obtain
- (2)
.
Because
, eq.(2) describes the response of a weakly nonlinear spring to a weak periodic forcing. In the following, we find an almost sinusoidal solution of frequency
.
First, we introduce the van der Pol transformation written as
where the
plane called van der Pol plane rotates around the
plane clockwise as shown in Fig.5.
On this plane, sinusoidal solutions of
of frequency
are represented as equilibria. By differentiating eqs.(3) and (4) and substituting eq.(2) and
to them, we obtain
Averaging eqs. (5) and (6) over the period
, we obtain
,
,
or, in polar coordinates
and
,
By finding the equilibria of eqs.(7) and (8), the response of the system to a weak periodic forcing can be analyzed.
As shown in Fig.6, when
, the frequency response function shows a peak of the usual resonance at
, and, when
, this peak is curved. For a hardening spring (
), the peak curves to the right, and to the left for a softening spring (
).
The analytical expressions of the equilibria are shown in Holmes and Rand (1976).
By using van der Pol plane rotating with frequency
and defining
, the
th order subharmonics can also be analyzed (Holmes and Holmes, 1981).
Chaos
To examine the response of the system to the periodic forcing, it is convenient to rewrite eq.(1) as
,
where
.
It is also convenient to consider that the
axis describes a circle as shown in Fig.7 because the variable
can be regarded as
-periodic.
By plotting
when the system crosses the Poincaré section
, a chaotic attractor appears for appropriate values of parameters.
Periodic changes of such chaotic attractors when
is increased from
to
are shown in
Figs.1 and 8,
and they show the stretching and folding properties of chaos.
Particularly, the values of parameters in Fig.8
are same as those used by Yoshisuke Ueda when he found chaos in 1961 (Ueda, 1979, 1980, and 1992).
For further information on chaos in the Duffing oscillator, see, e.g., Holmes (1979), Moon and Holmes (1979), Holmes and Whitley (1983), Guckenheimer and Holmes (1983), and Thompson and Stewart (2002).
,
,
,
, and
. By assembling the Poincaré sections of a trajectory for different phase
, the attractor of Duffing oscillator changes periodically (see also Fig.7). Note that the used values of parameters are same as those used by Yoshisuke Ueda when he found chaos in 1961 (Ueda, 1979, 1980, and 1992).
References
- G. Duffing, Erzwungene Schwingungen bei Veränderlicher Eigenfrequenz., F. Vieweg u. Sohn, Braunschweig, 1918.
- J. Guckenheimer and P. Holmes, Nonlinear Oscillations, Dynamical Systems, and Bifurcations of Vector Fields, Springer-Verlag, 1983.
- P.J. Holmes and D.A. Rand , The bifurcations of Duffing's equation: An application of catastrophe theory, Journal of Sound and Vibration, 44, 237-253, 1976.
- P. Holmes, A nonlinear oscillator with a strange attractor, Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A, 292, 419-448, 1979.
- P. Holmes and D. Rand , Phase portraits and bifurcations of the non-linear oscillator:
, International Journal of Non-linear Mechanics, 15, 449-458, 1980.
- C. Holmes and P. Holmes, Second order averaging and bifurcations to subharmonics in Duffing's equation, Journal of Sound and Vibration, 78, 161-174, 1981.
- P. Holmes and D. Whitley, On the attracting set for Duffing's equation, II. A geometrical model for moderate force and damping, Physica, 7D, 111-123, 1983.
- F.C. Moon and P.J. Holmes, A magnetoelastic strange attractor, Journal of Sound and Vibration, 65, 275-296, 1979.
- F.C. Moon and P.J. Holmes, Addendum: A magnetoelastic strange attractor, Journal of Sound and Vibration, 69, 339, 1980.
- E. Ott, Chaos in Dynamical Systems (2nd edition), Cambridge University Press, 2002.
- J.M.T. Thompson and H.B. Stewart, Nonlinear Dynamics and Chaos (2nd edition), John Wiley & Sons, 2002.
- Y. Ueda, Randomly transitional phenomena in the system governed by Duffing's equation, Journal of Statistical Physics, 20, 181-196, 1979.
- Y. Ueda, Explosion of strange attractors exhibited by Duffing's equation, In Nonlinear Dynamics, R.H.G. Helleman (ed.), 422-434, New York Academy of Science, 1980.
- Y. Ueda, The Road to Chaos, Aerial Press, 1992.
Internal references
- John W. Milnor (2006) Attractor. Scholarpedia, 1(11):1815.
- Jan A. Sanders (2006) Averaging. Scholarpedia, 1(11):1760.
- James Meiss (2007) Dynamical systems. Scholarpedia, 2(2):1629.
- Eugene M. Izhikevich (2007) Equilibrium. Scholarpedia, 2(10):2014.
- James Meiss (2007) Hamiltonian systems. Scholarpedia, 2(8):1943.
- Jeff Moehlis, Kresimir Josic, Eric T. Shea-Brown (2006) Periodic orbit. Scholarpedia, 1(7):1358.
- Philip Holmes and Eric T. Shea-Brown (2006) Stability. Scholarpedia, 1(10):1838.
- Takashi Kanamaru (2007) Van der Pol oscillator. Scholarpedia, 2(1):2202.
External links
See also
Van der Pol oscillator, Stability, Averaging, Chaos
| Takashi Kanamaru (2008) Duffing oscillator. Scholarpedia, 3(3):6327, (go to the first approved version) Created: 20 January 2008, reviewed: 25 March 2008, accepted: 25 March 2008 |
space for
,
,
,
.
,
, and
. The solid and dotted lines correspond to the stable and unstable equilibria, respectively.
,
.




