Scaling invariance: a bridge between geometry, dynamics and criticality
Edson D. Leonel, Diego F. M. Oliveira

TL;DR
This paper explores how scale invariance acts as a unifying principle connecting geometry, dynamics, and critical phenomena across various complex systems, using geometrical, analytical, and dynamical models.
Contribution
It provides a unified, physically motivated framework demonstrating how scaling invariance emerges across systems of increasing complexity, linking dynamical systems and statistical physics.
Findings
Power-law behavior arises without characteristic scales.
Scaling invariance classifies systems into universality classes.
Transitions in chaotic systems can be understood via critical exponents.
Abstract
Scale invariance is a central organizing principle in physics, underlying phenomena that range from critical behaviour in statistical mechanics to transport and chaos in nonlinear dynamical systems. Here we present a unified and physically motivated exploration of scaling concepts, emphasizing how invariance under rescaling transformations emerges across systems of increasing dynamical complexity. Rather than adopting a purely abstract approach, we combine simple geometrical constructions, analytical arguments, and prototypical dynamical models to build physical intuition. We begin with elementary, easily reproducible examples governed by a single control parameter, showing how power-law behaviour naturally arises when characteristic scales are absent. We then extend the discussion to nonlinear dynamical systems exhibiting local bifurcations, where two scaling variables control the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsChaos control and synchronization · Nonlinear Dynamics and Pattern Formation · Ecosystem dynamics and resilience
