Abstract

Employing electronic component including memristor and Josephson junction to mimic biological neuron or synapse has elicited intense research in recent years. Neurons described by nonlinear oscillators can exhibit complex electrical activities. Josephson junctions are excellent candidates for neuron-inspired components because of their physical properties with low energy costs and high efficiency. In this paper, we revisit a prior work on memristive Josephson junction (MJJ) to identify the dynamical mechanisms to mimic neuron-like excitability and spiking. The inductive memristive Josephson junction (L-MJJ) model is further developed by adding an inductor with internal resistor. It is found that the L-MJJ model can reproduce square-wave bursting of the classical neuronal model from the neurodynamics point of view. The coupling L-MJJ oscillators can achieve in-phase and antiphase bursting synchronization similar with nonlinear coupling neurons. From the framework of nonlinear dynamics theory, this work aspires to build effective bridge between superconducting physics and theoretical neuroscience. Obtained results confirm the potential feasibility of this junction in designing a neuron-inspired computation to explore dynamics of larger-scale neuromorphic network.

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