Nonlinear phase-amplitude reduction of delay-induced oscillations
Kiyoshi Kotani, Yutaro Ogawa, Sho Shirasaka, Akihiko Akao, Yasuhiko, Jimbo, and Hiroya Nakao

TL;DR
This paper develops a nonlinear phase-amplitude reduction theory for delay-induced oscillations, enabling analysis of oscillators under moderate perturbations, with applications to biological and physical systems.
Contribution
It introduces a Floquet-theorem-based reduction method for delay-differential equation oscillators under moderate perturbations, extending beyond weak perturbation limits.
Findings
The method accurately predicts oscillator phase and amplitude dynamics.
It reveals bistability in oscillation amplitude under periodic perturbations.
Application to gene-regulatory models explains complex biological rhythms.
Abstract
Spontaneous oscillations induced by time delays are observed in many real-world systems. Phase reduction theory for limit-cycle oscillators described by delay-differential equations (DDEs) has been developed to analyze their synchronization properties, but it is applicable only when the perturbation applied to the oscillator is sufficiently weak. In this study, we formulate a nonlinear phase-amplitude reduction theory for limit-cycle oscillators described by DDEs on the basis of the Floquet theorem, which is applicable when the oscillator is subjected to perturbations of moderate intensity. We propose a numerical method to evaluate the leading Floquet eigenvalues, eigenfunctions, and adjoint eigenfunctions necessary for the reduction and derive a set of low-dimensional nonlinear phase-amplitude equations approximately describing the oscillator dynamics. By analyzing an analytically…
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