Long time dynamics and disorder-induced traveling waves in the stochastic Kuramoto model
Eric Lu\c{c}on, Christophe Poquet

TL;DR
This paper investigates the long-term behavior of the stochastic Kuramoto model, revealing how disorder and noise influence the emergence of traveling waves and system dynamics over extended time scales.
Contribution
It demonstrates that disorder-induced fluctuations dominate over noise on a luctuation scale, leading to traveling waves in the empirical measure for fixed disorder realizations.
Findings
Disorder causes traveling waves in the system's empirical measure.
Finite-size effects lead to deviations from mean-field behavior over long times.
Asymmetry in frequencies affects the direction and speed of traveling waves.
Abstract
The aim of the paper is to address the long time behavior of the Kuramoto model of mean-field coupled phase rotators, subject to white noise and quenched frequencies. We analyse the influence of the fluctuations of both thermal noise and frequencies (seen as a disorder) on a large but finite population of rotators, in the case where the law of the disorder is symmetric. On a finite time scale , the system is known to be self-averaging: the empirical measure of the system converges as to the deterministic solution of a nonlinear Fokker-Planck equation which exhibits a stable manifold of synchronized stationary profiles for large interaction. On longer time scales, competition between the finite-size effects of the noise and disorder makes the system deviate from this mean-field behavior. In the main result of the paper we show that on a time scale of order $…
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