Frequency Synchronization Induced by Frequency Detuning
Abstract
It is widely held that identical systems tend to behave similarly under comparable conditions. Yet, for systems that interact through a network, symmetry breaking can lead to scenarios in which this expectation does not hold. Prominent examples are chimera states in multistable phase-oscillator networks. Here, we show that for a broad class of such networks, asynchronous states can be converted into frequency-synchronized states when identical oscillators are detuned to have different intrinsic frequencies. Importantly, we show that frequency synchronization is achieved over a range of intrinsic frequency detuning and is thus a robust effect. These results, which are supported by theory, simulations, and electrochemical oscillator experiments, reveal a counterintuitive opportunity to use parameter heterogeneity to promote synchronization.
Cite
@article{arxiv.2505.04714,
title = {Frequency Synchronization Induced by Frequency Detuning},
author = {Jorge Luis Ocampo-Espindola and Christian Bick and Adilson E. Motter and István Z. Kiss},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2505.04714},
year = {2025}
}