Revival of oscillation from mean-field-induced death: Theory and experiment
Debarati Ghosh, Tanmoy Banerjee, J\"urgen Kurths

TL;DR
This paper presents a theoretical and experimental study on reviving oscillations in coupled oscillator networks using mean-field diffusive coupling, introducing two control parameters to restore rhythmicity even under complete diffusion conditions.
Contribution
It introduces a novel mean-field coupling scheme with two control parameters, enabling revival of oscillations from death states, supported by bifurcation analysis and experimental validation.
Findings
Mean-field coupling can suppress and revive oscillations.
Two control parameters effectively restore rhythmicity.
Experimental evidence confirms theoretical predictions.
Abstract
The revival of oscillation and maintaining rhythmicity in a network of coupled oscillators offer an open challenge to researchers as the cessation of oscillation often leads to a fatal system degradation and an irrecoverable malfunctioning in many physical, biological and physiological systems. Recently a general technique of restoration of rhythmicity in diffusively coupled networks of nonlinear oscillators has been proposed in [Zou et al. Nature Commun. 6:7709, 2015], where it is shown that a proper feedback parameter that controls the rate of diffusion can effectively revive oscillation from an oscillation suppressed state. In this paper we show that the mean-field diffusive coupling, which can suppress oscillation even in a network of identical oscillators, can be modified in order to revoke the cessation of oscillation induced by it. Using a rigorous bifurcation analysis we show…
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