Abstract

The transition from simple periodic to bursting behavior in a three-dimensional model system of the hemin-hydrogen-peroxide-sulfite pH oscillator is investigated. A two-parameter continuation in the flow rate and the hemin decay rate is performed to identify the region of complex dynamics. The bursting oscillations emerge subsequent to a cascade of period-doubling bifurcations and the formation of a chaotic attractor in parameter space where they are found to be organized in periodic-chaotic progressions. This suggests that the bursting oscillations are not associated with phase-locked states on a two-torus. The bursting behavior is classified by a bifurcation analysis using the intrinsic slow-fast structure of the dynamics. In particular, we find a slowly varying quasispecies (i.e., a linear combination of two species) which acts as an "internal" or quasistatic bifurcation parameter for the remaining two-dimensional subsystem. A systematic two-parameter continuation in the internal parameter and one of the external bifurcation parameters reveals a transition in the bursting mechanism from sub-Hopf/fold-cycle to fold/sub-Hopf type. In addition, the slow-fast analysis provides an explanation for the origin of quasiperiodic behavior in the hemin system, even though the underlying mechanism might be of more general importance.

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