Spiral wave chimeras in reaction-diffusion systems: phenomenon, mechanism and transitions
Bing-Wei Li, Yuan He, Ling-Dong Li, Lei Yang, and Xingang Wang

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that stable spiral wave chimeras can occur in locally coupled reaction-diffusion systems, revealing new mechanisms and transition scenarios, including core breakup and expansion, and introduces the concept of shadowed spirals.
Contribution
It shows that spiral wave chimeras are possible in locally coupled reaction-diffusion systems, challenging previous beliefs and expanding understanding of spatiotemporal pattern formation.
Findings
Stable SWCs observed in locally coupled RD systems.
Transitions include core breakup and core expansion.
Introduction of shadowed spirals as a coexistence state.
Abstract
Spiral wave chimeras (SWCs), which combine the features of spiral waves and chimera states, are a new type of dynamical patterns emerged in spatiotemporal systems due to the spontaneous symmetry breaking of the system dynamics. In generating SWC, the conventional wisdom is that the dynamical elements should be coupled in a nonlocal fashion. For this reason, it is commonly believed that SWC is excluded from the general reaction-diffusion (RD) systems possessing only local couplings. Here, by an experimentally feasible model of three-component FitzHugh-Nagumo-type RD system, we demonstrate that, even though the system elements are locally coupled, stable SWCs can still be observed in a wide region in the parameter space. The properties of SWCs are explored, and the underlying mechanisms are analyzed from the point view of coupled oscillators. Transitions from SWC to incoherent states are…
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