The dynamical origin of the universality classes of spatiotemporal intermittency
Zahera Jabeen (IMSc, India), Neelima Gupte (IIT-Madras, India)

TL;DR
This paper investigates the dynamical mechanisms behind the universality classes of spatiotemporal intermittency in coupled sine circle map lattices, revealing a transition driven by an attractor-widening crisis and linking it to cellular automaton behavior.
Contribution
It identifies the dynamical origin of spreading and non-spreading regimes and their transition in coupled map lattices, connecting these to cellular automaton transitions and attractor crises.
Findings
Two distinct universality classes identified: directed percolation and spatial intermittency.
Transition from probabilistic to deterministic cellular automaton at the infection line.
Attractor-widening crisis causes the spreading-non-spreading transition.
Abstract
Studies of the phase diagram of the coupled sine circle map lattice have identified the presence of two distinct universality classes of spatiotemporal intermittency viz. spatiotemporal intermittency of the directed percolation class with a complete set of directed percolation exponents, and spatial intermittency which does not belong to this class. We show that these two types of behavior are special cases of a spreading regime where each site can infect its neighbors permitting an initial disturbance to spread, and a non-spreading regime where no infection is possible, with the two regimes being separated by a line, the infection line. The coupled map lattice can be mapped on to an equivalent cellular automaton which shows a transition from a probabilistic cellular automaton to a deterministic cellular automaton at the infection line. The origins of the spreading-non-spreading…
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