Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1898803 Physica D: Nonlinear Phenomena 2009 14 Pages PDF
Abstract

We explore methods to locate subcritical branches of spatially periodic solutions in pattern forming systems with a nonlinear finite-wavelength instability. We do so by means of a direct expansion in the amplitude of the linearly least stable mode about the appropriate reference state which one considers. This is motivated by the observation that for some equations fully nonlinear chaotic dynamics has been found to be organized around periodic solutions that do not simply bifurcate from the basic (laminar) state. We apply the method to two model equations, a subcritical generalization of the Swift–Hohenberg equation and a novel extension of the Kuramoto–Sivashinsky equation that we introduce to illustrate the abovementioned scenario in which weakly chaotic subcritical dynamics is organized around periodic states that bifurcate “from infinity” and that can nevertheless be probed perturbatively. We explore the reliability and robustness of such an expansion, with a particular focus on the use of these methods for determining the existence and approximate properties of finite-amplitude stationary solutions. Such methods obviously are to be used with caution: the expansions are often only asymptotic approximations, and if they converge their radius of convergence may be small. Nevertheless, expansions to higher order in the amplitude can be a useful tool to obtain qualitatively reliable results.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Mathematics Applied Mathematics
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