Explosive synchronization with partial degree-frequency correlation
Abstract
Networks of Kuramoto oscillators with a positive correlation between the oscillators frequencies and the degree of their corresponding vertices exhibit so-called explosive synchronization behavior, which is now under intensive investigation. Here we study and discuss explosive synchronization in a situation that has not yet been considered, namely when only a part, typically a small part, of the vertices is subjected to a degree-frequency correlation. Our results show that in order to have explosive synchronization, it suffices to have degree-frequency correlations only for the hubs, the vertices with the highest degrees. Moreover, we show that a partial degree-frequency correlation does not only promotes but also allows explosive synchronization to happen in networks for which a full degree-frequency correlation would not allow it. We perform a mean-field analysis and our conclusions were corroborated by exhaustive numerical experiments for synthetic networks and also for the undirected and unweighed version of a typical benchmark biological network, namely the neural network of the worm Caenorhabditis elegans. The latter is an explicit example where partial degree-frequency correlation leads to explosive synchronization with hysteresis, in contrast with the fully correlated case, for which no explosive synchronization is observed.
- Publication:
-
Physical Review E
- Pub Date:
- February 2015
- DOI:
- arXiv:
- arXiv:1408.2483
- Bibcode:
- 2015PhRvE..91b2818P
- Keywords:
-
- 05.45.Xt;
- 89.75.Hc;
- 89.75.Fb;
- Synchronization;
- coupled oscillators;
- Networks and genealogical trees;
- Structures and organization in complex systems;
- Nonlinear Sciences - Adaptation and Self-Organizing Systems;
- Condensed Matter - Statistical Mechanics;
- Nonlinear Sciences - Chaotic Dynamics
- E-Print:
- 10 pages, 6 figures, final version to appear in PRE