Linear And Nonlinear Arabesques: A Study Of Closed Chains Of Negative 2-Element Circuits
Chris Antonopoulos, Vasileios Basios, Jacques Demongeot, Pasquale, Nardone, Rene Thomas

TL;DR
This paper introduces and analyzes a family of conservative dynamical systems called arabesques, characterized by closed chains of negative circuits, exploring their linear and nonlinear variants and their complex trajectories.
Contribution
It defines the arabesque systems, examines their linear and nonlinear forms, and analyzes their complex dynamics and symmetries across different dimensions.
Findings
Linear arabesque systems exhibit increasingly complex open tori.
Nonlinear variants have three unstable steady states regardless of dimension.
3D nonlinear systems display mixed quasi-periodic and chaotic trajectories.
Abstract
In this paper we consider a family of dynamical systems that we call "arabesques", defined as closed chains of 2-element negative circuits. An -dimensional arabesque system has 2-element circuits, but in addition, it displays by construction, two -element circuits which are both positive vs one positive and one negative, depending on the parity (even or odd) of the dimension . In view of the absence of diagonal terms in their Jacobian matrices, all these dynamical systems are conservative and consequently, they can not possess any attractor. First, we analyze a linear variant of them which we call "arabesque 0" or for short "A0". For increasing dimensions, the trajectories are increasingly complex open tori. Next, we inserted a single cubic nonlinearity that does not affect the signs of its circuits (that we call "arabesque 1" or for short "A1"). These systems have three…
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