Boundary for Complete Set of Attractors for Forced–Damped Essentially Nonlinear Systems

Forced–damped essentially nonlinear oscillators can have a multitude of dynamic attractors. Generically, no analytic procedure is available to reveal all such attractors. For many practical and engineering applications, however, it might be not necessary to know all the attractors in detail. Knowled...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of applied mechanics 2015-05, Vol.82 (5)
Hauptverfasser: Grinberg, Itay, Gendelman, Oleg V
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description Forced–damped essentially nonlinear oscillators can have a multitude of dynamic attractors. Generically, no analytic procedure is available to reveal all such attractors. For many practical and engineering applications, however, it might be not necessary to know all the attractors in detail. Knowledge of the zone in the state space (or the space of initial conditions), in which all the attractors are situated might be sufficient. We demonstrate that this goal can be achieved by relatively simple means—even for systems with multiple and unknown attractors. More specifically, this paper suggests an analytic procedure to determine the zone in the space of initial conditions, which contains all attractors of the essentially nonlinear forced–damped system for a given set of parameters. The suggested procedure is an extension of well-known Lyapunov functions approach; here we use it for analysis of stability of nonautonomous systems with external forcing. Consequently, instead of the complete state space of the problem, we consider a space of initial conditions and define a bounded trapping region in this space, so that for every initial condition outside this region, the dynamic flow will eventually enter it and will never leave it. This approach is used to find a special closed curve on the plane of initial conditions for a forced–damped strongly nonlinear oscillator with single-degree-of-freedom (single-DOF). Solving the equations of motion is not required. The approach is illustrated by the important benchmark example of x2n potential, including the celebrated Ueda oscillator for n = 2. Another example is the well-known model of forced–damped oscillator with double-well potential. We also demonstrate that the boundary curve, obtained by analytic tools, can be efficiently “tightened” numerically, yielding even stricter estimation for the zone of the existing attractors.
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subjects Boundaries
Dynamical systems
Initial conditions
Mathematical analysis
Mathematical models
Nonlinear dynamics
Nonlinearity
Oscillators
title Boundary for Complete Set of Attractors for Forced–Damped Essentially Nonlinear Systems
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