Abstract

We study pairs of symmetrically coupled, identical Lengyel-Epstein oscillators, where the coupling can be through both the fast and slow variables. We find a plethora of strong symmetry breaking rhythms, in which the two oscillators exhibit qualitatively different oscillations, and their amplitudes differ by as much as an order of magnitude. Analysis of the folded singularities in the coupled system shows that a key folded node, located off the symmetry axis, is the primary mechanism responsible for the strong symmetry breaking. Passage through the neighborhood of this folded node can result in splitting between the amplitudes of the oscillators, in which one is constrained to remain of small amplitude, while the other makes a large-amplitude oscillation or a mixed-mode oscillation. The analysis also reveals an organizing center in parameter space, where the system undergoes an asymmetric canard explosion, in which one oscillator exhibits a sequence of limit cycle canards, over an interval of parameter values centered at the explosion point, while the other oscillator executes small amplitude oscillations. Other folded singularities can also impact properties of the strong symmetry breaking rhythms. We contrast these strong symmetry breaking rhythms with asymmetric rhythms that are close to symmetric states, such as in-phase or anti-phase oscillations. In addition to the symmetry breaking rhythms, we also find an explosion of anti-phase limit cycle canards, which mediates the transition from small-amplitude, anti-phase oscillations to large-amplitude, anti-phase oscillations.

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