
TL;DR
This paper reviews the concept of self-oscillation across various systems, explaining its mechanisms, criteria, and applications, emphasizing the energetics involved and illustrating its significance in natural and engineered systems.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of self-oscillation, including criteria, dynamics, synchronization, and applications, with a focus on energy aspects often overlooked in nonlinear systems.
Findings
Self-oscillation can occur in linear systems under certain conditions.
Coupled self-oscillators can spontaneously synchronize.
Motors operate as self-oscillators with a limit efficiency theorem.
Abstract
Physicists are very familiar with forced and parametric resonance, but usually not with self-oscillation, a property of certain dynamical systems that gives rise to a great variety of vibrations, both useful and destructive. In a self-oscillator, the driving force is controlled by the oscillation itself so that it acts in phase with the velocity, causing a negative damping that feeds energy into the vibration: no external rate needs to be adjusted to the resonant frequency. The famous collapse of the Tacoma Narrows bridge in 1940, often attributed by introductory physics texts to forced resonance, was actually a self-oscillation, as was the swaying of the London Millennium Footbridge in 2000. Clocks are self-oscillators, as are bowed and wind musical instruments. The heart is a "relaxation oscillator," i.e., a non-sinusoidal self-oscillator whose period is determined by sudden,…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
