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  1. Free, publicly-accessible full text available September 30, 2024
  2. Symmetry-breaking in coupled, identical, fast–slow systems produces a rich, dramatic variety of dynamical behavior—such as amplitudes and frequencies differing by an order of magnitude or more and qualitatively different rhythms between oscillators, corresponding to different functional states. We present a novel method for analyzing these systems. It identifies the key geometric structures responsible for this new symmetry-breaking, and it shows that many different types of symmetry-breaking rhythms arise robustly. We find symmetry-breaking rhythms in which one oscillator exhibits small-amplitude oscillations, while the other exhibits phase-shifted small-amplitude oscillations, large-amplitude oscillations, mixed-mode oscillations, or even undergoes an explosion of limit cycle canards. Two prototypical fast–slow systems illustrate the method: the van der Pol equation that describes electrical circuits and the Lengyel–Epstein model of chemical oscillators. 
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  3. Abstract In this article, the recently discovered phenomenon of delayed Hopf bifurcations (DHB) in reaction–diffusion partial differential equations (PDEs) is analysed in the cubic Complex Ginzburg–Landau equation, as an equation in its own right, with a slowly varying parameter. We begin by using the classical asymptotic methods of stationary phase and steepest descents on the linearized PDE to show that solutions, which have approached the attracting quasi-steady state (QSS) before the Hopf bifurcation remain near that state for long times after the instantaneous Hopf bifurcation and the QSS has become repelling. In the complex time plane, the phase function of the linearized PDE has a saddle point, and the Stokes and anti-Stokes lines are central to the asymptotics. The non-linear terms are treated by applying an iterative method to the mild form of the PDE given by perturbations about the linear particular solution. This tracks the closeness of solutions near the attracting and repelling QSS in the full, non-linear PDE. Next, we show that beyond a key Stokes line through the saddle there is a curve in the space-time plane along which the particular solution of the linear PDE ceases to be exponentially small, causing the solution of the non-linear PDE to diverge from the repelling QSS and exhibit large-amplitude oscillations. This curve is called the space–time buffer curve. The homogeneous solution also stops being exponentially small in a spatially dependent manner, as determined also by the initial data and time. Hence, a competition arises between these two solutions, as to which one ceases to be exponentially small first, and this competition governs spatial dependence of the DHB. We find four different cases of DHB, depending on the outcomes of the competition, and we quantify to leading order how these depend on the main system parameters, including the Hopf frequency, initial time, initial data, source terms, and diffusivity. Examples are presented for each case, with source terms that are a uni-modal function, a smooth step function, a spatially periodic function and an algebraically growing function. Also, rich spatio-temporal dynamics are observed in the post-DHB oscillations. Finally, it is shown that large-amplitude source terms can be designed so that solutions spend substantially longer times near the repelling QSS, and hence, region-specific control over the delayed onset of oscillations can be achieved. 
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