Hidden hyperchaos and electronic circuit
application in a 5D self-exciting homopolar disc dynamo
Zhouchao Wei,1,2,3,4,a) Irene Moroz,3
J. C. Sprott,5 Akif Akgul,6 and Wei Zhang4
1School of Mathematics and
Physics, China University of Geosciences, Wuhan 430074, China
2Guangxi Colleges and Universities Key
Laboratory of Complex System Optimization and Big Data
Processing, Yulin Normal University, Yulin 537000, China
3Mathematical Institute, University of Oxford,
Oxford OX2 6GG, England
4College of Mechanical Engineering, Beijing
University of Technology, Beijing 100124, China
5Department of Physics, University of Wisconsin
- Madison, Madison, Wisconsin 53706, USA
6Department of Electrical and Electronic
Engineering, Faculty of Technology, Sakarya University,
Sakarya 54050, Turkey
(Received 21 December 2016; accepted 13 February
2017; published online 27 February 2017)
ABSTRACT
We report on the finding of hidden hyperchaos in a 5D extension to a
known 3D self-exciting homopolar disc dynamo. The hidden hyperchaos
is identified through three positive Lyapunov exponents under the
condition that the proposed model has just two stable equilibrium
states in certain regions of parameter space. The new 5D
hyperchaotic self-exciting homopolar disc dynamo has multiple
attractors including point attractors, limit cycles, quasi-periodic
dynamics, hidden chaos or hyperchaos, as well as coexisting
attractors. We use numerical integrations to create the phase plane
trajectories, produce bifurcation diagram, and compute Lyapunov
exponents to verify the hidden attractors. Because no unstable
equilibria exist in two parameter regions, the system has a
multistability and six kinds of complex dynamic behaviors. To the
best of our knowledge, this feature has not been previously reported
in any other high-dimensional system. Moreover, the 5D hyperchaotic
system has been simulated using a specially designed electronic
circuit and viewed on an oscilloscope, thereby confirming the
results of the numerical integrations. Both Matlab and the
oscilloscope outputs produce similar phase portraits. Such
implementations in real time represent
a new type of hidden attractor with important consequences for
engineering applications.
Ref: Z. Wei, I. Moroz, J. C. Sprott,
A. Akgul, and W. Zhang, Chaos 27,
033101-1 -- 033101-7 (2017)
The complete paper is available in
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