Synchronization
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| Arkady Pikovsky and Michael Rosenblum (2007), Scholarpedia, 2(12):1459. | revision #38726 [link to/cite this article] | |||||||||||||||||||
(Redirected from Synchrony)
Curator: Dr. Arkady Pikovsky, Department of Physics, University of Potsdam, Germany
Curator: Dr. Michael Rosenblum, Institute of Physics, University of Potsdam, Germany
| in-phase synchronization | anti-phase synchronization |
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| synchronization with an arbitrary phase shift | no synchrony |
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In a classical context, synchronization (from Greek
:
syn = the same, common and
: chronos = time)
means adjustment of rhythms of self-sustained periodic oscillators due to their weak
interaction;
this adjustment can be described in terms of
phase locking and frequency entrainment.
Modern concept covers also such objects as rotators and
chaotic systems; in the latter case one distinguishes between
different forms of synchronization: complete/identical, phase, generalized, etc.
Synchronization phenomena in large ensembles of coupled systems
often manifest themselves as collective coherent regimes appearing via
non-equilibrium phase transitions.
Contents |
History
The history of synchronization goes back to the 17th century when the famous Dutch scientist Christiaan Huygens reported on his observation of synchronization of two pendulum clocks which he had invented shortly before: "... It is quite worths noting that when we suspended two clocks so constructed from two hooks imbedded in the same wooden beam, the motions of each pendulum in opposite swings were so much in agreement that they never receded the least bit from each other and the sound of each was always heard simultaneously. Further, if this agreement was disturbed by some interference, it reestablished itself in a short time. For a long time I was amazed at this unexpected result, but after a careful examination finally found that the cause of this is due to the motion of the beam, even though this is hardly perceptible."
Another important observation of synchrony of organ pipes was described by Lord Reyleigh in his "Theory of Sound". Being, probably, the oldest scientifically studied nonlinear effect, synchronization was understood only in 1920-ies when E. V. Appleton and B. Van der Pol systematically -- theoretically and experimentally -- studied synchronization of triode electronic generators.
Phase of oscillations and its dynamics
Synchronization properties of periodic self-sustained oscillators
are based on
the existence of a special variable, phase
(see Phase Models).
Mathematically, self-sustained oscillations correspond to a stable limit cycle
in the state space of an autonomous continuous-time dynamical system.
The phase
can be introduced as the
variable parametrizing the motion along this cycle.
One can always choose phase in a way
that it grows uniformly in time,
where
is the natural frequency of oscillations. The
phase is neutrally stable: it's perturbations neither grow nor decay, this
corresponds to the invariance of solutions of autonomous dynamical systems with respect to time shifts. Contrary to this, the amplitude
of oscillations has a definite stable value (for systems which can be described in terms of energy, this value is determined by a balance between energy influx and dissipation).
Due to the neutral stability of the phase, already a small perturbation (e.g. external periodic forcing or coupling to another system) can cause large deviations of the phase -- contrary to the amplitude, which is only slightly perturbed due to the transversal stability of the cycle. Thus, with a relatively small forcing one can adjust the phase and the frequency of oscillations without influencing the amplitude, this adjustment is the essence of the synchronization phenomenon.
Synchronization by external forcing
The simplest setup for observation of synchronization is when a periodic force is applied to an autonomous self-sustained oscillator. Examples of such a situation include radio-controlled clocks (relatively non-presise clocks are made perfect being adjusted by a periodic radio signal), cardiac pacemakers (heart beats are paced by a sequence of pulses from an electronic generator) and circadian rhythms (internal clocks of an organism are locked by the 24 h day-night cycle).
Phase approximation for weak forcing
Stability of amplitudes and neutral stability of phases suggests to
describe the effect of a small forcing in the framework of
the so-called phase approximation, where only the dynamics of the
phase is followed (see Kuramoto (1984) for details).
Considering the simplest case of a limit cycle oscillator, driven by a
periodic force with frequency
and amplitude
,
one can write the equation for the perturbed phase dynamics in the form
where the
-periodic in its both arguments coupling function
depends on the form of the limit cycle and of the forcing.
Expanded into a Fourier series, function
contains fast oscillating and slowly varying, resonant terms.
The latter can be
gathered as
. Thus, performing averaging over fast oscillations, one obtains
the following basic equation for the dynamics of the phase difference
where
is the difference between the
phases of the oscillations and of the forcing.
Function
is
-periodic, and in the simplest case
Eq. (3) is called
the Adler equation.
One can easily see that on the plane of parameters of the external
forcing
"frequency mismatch
-- amplitude
"
there is a region
where Eq. (3) has a stable
stationary solution that exactly corresponds
to phase locking (the phase
just follows the phase of the
forcing, i.e.
) and frequency entrainment
(the observed frequency of the oscillator
exactly coincides with the forcing frequency
).
This region is called synchronization region, or Arnold tongue.
High order locking
If the frequencies of the oscillator and of the force fullfil
, then the
dynamics of the generalized phase difference
is described by the equation similar to
Eq.~(3), namely by
.
Synchronous regime then means perfect entrainment of the
oscillator frequency at the rational multiple of
the forcing frequency,
, as well as phase locking
.
The overall picture for a broad range of forcing frequencies is
presented by a family of triangular-shaped
synchronization regions touching the
-axis at the rationals of the natural frequency
(Fig. 9(a)).
Moderate and strong forcing
This picture is preserved for moderate forcing, although now the shape
of the tongues generally differs from being exactly triangular.
The phase of oscillations does not exactly follow that of the forcing,
instead the
condition
holds that means nevrtheless
the full entrainment of frequencies
.
For a fixed amplitude of
the forcing
and varied driving frequency
one observes different phase locking intervals where the
motion is periodic, whereas in between them it is quasiperiodic.
The curve
vs.
thus consists of horizontal plateaus
at all possible rational frequency ratios; this fractal curve is called
devil's staircase (Fig. 9(b)).
A famous example of such a curve is the voltage--current plot for a
Josephson junction in an ac electromagnetic field; here
synchronization plateaus are called Shapiro steps.
Note that a junction can be considered as a rotator (rotations are
maintained by a dc current);
this example demonstrates that synchronization properties of rotators
are very close to those of oscillators.
For very strong forcing the dynamics is no more close to that in the phase approximation and many extra features, e.g. a transition to chaos, may occur.
Two coupled oscillators
Synchronization of two coupled self-sustained
oscillators can be described in a way similar to the case of periodic
forcing.
A weak interaction
affects only the phases of two oscillators
and
,
and Eq. (1) generalizes to
For the phase difference
one obtains
after averaging an equation of the type of (3). This is performed by expanding
in a double Fourier series, neglecting all fast oscillating terms and keeping only slow terms depending on the phase difference. (More on the relationship between the coupling function and the resulting phase model can be read in Phase Models and Phase Response Curve).
Synchronization now
means that two nonidentical oscillators start to oscillate with
the same frequency
(or, more generally, with rationally related frequencies).
This common frequency usually lies between
and
. It is worth mentioning that locking of the
phases and frequencies implies no restrictions on the amplitudes, in
fact the synchronized oscillators may have very different amplitudes and
waveforms (e.g., oscillations may be relaxation (integrate-and-fire)
or quasiharmonic).
For coupled oscillators of similar waveforms one often obeserves (like
Huygens observed deviations of pendula in his experiments) the phase shift
between the
synchronous motions. One distinguishes
different forms of synchronous dynamics: in-phase, when the phase shift
is nearly zero, anti-phase when it is close to
, and
out-of-phase for the other values of the difference.
An interesting phenomenon that may be observed for strong diffusive coupling is the oscillation death, when oscillations extinct in both systems. This happens because the coupling tends to equalize the states of the system bringing extra dissipation in them.
Ensembles of coupled oscillators
Mutual synchronization can be observed also in large populions of oscillating systems, consisting of many hundreds or thousends of units. It appears then as a collective coherent mode, examples are a simultaneous flashing of fireflies sitting on trees and a rhythmic applause in a large audience. In some cases such a coherent mode is not desirable, an example is the lateral swaying of the Millennium Bridge in London that occured on the opening day, which appeared due to emerging synchrony of pedestrians' steps.
The mutual synchronization in a large populations of
oscillators can be treated as a nonequilibrium phase transition, the
amplitude of the mean field (
in Fig. 11) serving as an order parameter.
The simplest model in the phase approximation is the Kuramoto model
which is a direct generalization of Eqs. (4) to the case
when each unit is coupled with all
oscillators in the population:
The Kuramoto model describes a situation where uncoupled limit cycle oscillators are almost identical with a narrow distribution of frequencies, and the coupling is weak (see Phase Models).
If the distribution of natural frequencies
is broad, small
coupling cannot synchronize oscillators and they remain independent. At
some critical coupling
, however, a transition to
collective synchrony occurs (the transition is sharp in the thermodynamic
limit of very large
), where a periodic global mode appears.
With further increase of coupling, this mode entrains more and more
oscillators. See Kuramoto (1984) for details and Acebron et al. (2005) for further references.
Effects of noise
Synchronization effects are quite robust against noise. The influence of a small noise on a synchronous state reduces typically to appearance of rather rare phase slips. In the case of periodically forced oscillations this means that synchrony is observed for a long time interval, which is interrupted by a slip event, where the forced system performs one cycle more (or one cycle less) compared to the forcing. This means that the natural noise-induced phase diffusion is highly suppressed. This is of course of advantage if one uses synchronization to increase stability of oscillator's frequency, e.g., to improve the quality of clocks.
Quite counterintuitive, common noise acting on noninteracting oscillating systems can synchronize them (see Coherence Resonance). This happens because the noise-induced dynamics of the phase is stable, and the phase follows, although implicitly, the pattern of the noisy forcing. If one and the same noise acts on two (or several) nearly identical systems, both phases follow the same pattern of noise and therefore are close to each other, although they remain irregular functions of time. In neurosciences one observes this synchronization by common noise as a reliable response of a neural oscillator (e.g., of a single neuron) on a repeatedly applied external pre-recorded noisy forcing.
Chaotic systems
In dissipative chaotic systems case one distinguishes between different forms of synchronization: complete, phase, master-slave, etc. (see Synchronization of Chaotic Oscillators)
Weak coupling: phase synchronization
Quite often one can find a projection of the strange attractor that
looks like a smeared limit cycle; phase is then introduced as a
variable that gains
with each rotation.
These rotations are nonuniform due to chaos, what can be modelled by
an effective noise in phase dynamics.
If this noise is small (i.e. the rotations are rather uniform),
the mean frequency of the system can be entrained
by a periodic forcing while the chaos is preserved.
If two or more chaotic oscillators with different natural frequencies interact, their mean
frequencies can be adjusted while the amplitudes remain chaotic and
only weakly correlated, see Pikovsky et al. (2001) for details.
Strong coupling: complete synchronization
Another type of chaotic synchronization --- complete synchronization --- can be observed for identical chaotic systems of any type (maps, autonomous or driven time-continuous systems). In the simplest case of two diffusively coupled in all variables systems the dynamics is described by
where
is the coupling parameter.
The regime when
for all
is called complete
synchronization; because in this state the diffusive coupling vanishes,
the dynamics is the same as if the systems were uncoupled. Although such
symmetric solution exists for all
, it is stable only if
the coupling is sufficiently strong.
To find the critical value of the coupling
one linearizes Eqs. (5) near the synchronized state and
obtains for the mismatch
the
linearized system
where
is the Jacobian at the chaotic solution
.
With
the ansatz
one can get rid of
the last term on the r.h.s. of (6);
the resulting equation coincides
with the linearized equation for small perturbations of the solutions of an
individual chaotic oscillator.
Thus,
grows proportionally to the
maximal Lyapunov exponent
of a single system,
and the critical coupling
is
.
Complete synchronization occurs if
,
i.e. when the divergence of trajectories of interacting systems
due to chaos is suppressed by the diffusive coupling. For weak coupling
, the states of two systems
are different,
.
Some other forms of synchronization in chaotic systems (e.g.,
generalized, master-slave) are similar to the complete one; in all these
cases synchronization appears if the coupling is strong enough.
Recommended Reading
Huygens (Hugenii), Ch. (1673) Horologium Oscillatorium, Parisiis, France: Apud F. Muguet; English translation: (1986) The Pendulum Clock, Ames: Iowa State University Press
Kuramoto, Y. (1984) Chemical Oscillations, Waves and Turbulence, Berlin: Springer
Blekhman, I. I. (1988) Synchronization in Science and Technology, NY: ASME Press
Glass, L. (2001) Synchronization and rhythmic processes in physiology. Nature, 410:277--284
Pikovsky, A., Rosenblum, M., and Kurths, J. (2001) Synchronization. A Universal Concept in Nonlinear Sciences, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press
Strogatz, S. (2003) SYNC. The emerging science of spontaneous order. New York: Hyperion
Acebron, J. A. et al. (2005) The Kuramoto model: A simple paradigm for synchronization phenomena, Rev. Mod. Phys., 77:137
Internal references
- Jan A. Sanders (2006) Averaging. Scholarpedia, 1(11):1760.
- Jonathan E. Rubin (2007) Burst synchronization. Scholarpedia, 2(10):1666.
- Alexander Neiman (2007) Coherence resonance. Scholarpedia, 2(11):1442.
- James Meiss (2007) Dynamical systems. Scholarpedia, 2(2):1629.
- Eugene M. Izhikevich (2007) Equilibrium. Scholarpedia, 2(10):2014.
- Roger D. Traub (2006) Fast oscillations. Scholarpedia, 1(12):1764.
- Kresimir Josic, Eric T. Shea-Brown, Jeff Moehlis (2006) Isochron. Scholarpedia, 1(8):1361.
- Jeff Moehlis, Kresimir Josic, Eric T. Shea-Brown (2006) Periodic orbit. Scholarpedia, 1(7):1358.
- Carmen C. Canavier (2006) Phase response curve. Scholarpedia, 1(12):1332.
- Carmen C. Canavier and Srisairam Achuthan (2007) Pulse coupled oscillators. Scholarpedia, 2(4):1331.
- Anatoly M. Samoilenko (2007) Quasiperiodic oscillations. Scholarpedia, 2(5):1783.
- Philip Holmes and Eric T. Shea-Brown (2006) Stability. Scholarpedia, 1(10):1838.
- Takashi Kanamaru (2007) Van der Pol oscillator. Scholarpedia, 2(1):2202.
See Also
Arnold Tongues, Burst Synchronization, Coherence Resonance, Chain of Oscillators, Desynchronization , Fast Threshold Modulation, Gait Control, Generalized Synchronization, Isochron, Kuramoto Model, Malkin Theorem, Mean-Field Synchronization, Neuronal Synchronization, Periodic Orbit, Phase Model, Resonance, Phase Response Curve, Pulse Coupled Oscillators, Slowly Coupled Oscillators, Synchronization of Chaotic Oscillators, Synchrony Measures, Weakly Coupled Oscillators
| Arkady Pikovsky, Michael Rosenblum (2007) Synchronization. Scholarpedia, 2(12):1459, (go to the first approved version) Created: 2 May 2006, reviewed: 12 December 2007, accepted: 25 December 2007 |





is some oscillatory observable, e.g. a deviation of a pendulum for coupled clocks in the Huygens experiment)
. Above critical coupling (right panel) at least a part of oscillators is entrained by a periodic mean field with amplitude
and
remains (right panel).


