Abstract

We examine the linear and nonlinear modes of a one-dimensional nonlinear electrical lattice, where the usual discrete Laplacian is replaced by a fractional discrete Laplacian. This induces a long-range intersite coupling that, at long distances, decreases as a power law. In the linear regime, we compute both the spectrum of plane waves and the mean-square displacement (MSD) of an initially localized excitation, in closed form in terms of regularized hypergeometric functions and the fractional exponent. The MSD shows ballistic behavior at long times, MSD∼t^{2} for all fractional exponents. When the fractional exponent is decreased from its standard integer value, the bandwidth decreases and the density of states shows a tendency towards degeneracy. In the limit of a vanishing exponent, the system becomes completely degenerate. For the nonlinear regime, we compute numerically the low-lying nonlinear modes, as a function of the fractional exponent. A modulational stability computation shows that, as the fractional exponent decreases, the number of electrical discrete solitons generated also decreases, eventually collapsing into a single soliton.

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