Astrocytes: Arnol'd Tongues Generalization in Dynamical Systems' Parameter Plane
Abstract
We discovered generalized structures, named astrocytes due to their shape, that constitute a defined region characterizing regular behavior within the parameter plane (PP) of dynamical systems (DSs). Morphologically, they are characterized by a branch and a soma with several vertices (arms) and sometimes with multiple periodicities. A bunch of infinite astrocytes emerge through their branches from a region, in general, of low periodicity. Astrocytes are embedded in a quasiperiodic-chaotic scenario. The soma complexity (number of vertices) determines a kind of hierarchy of the astrocytes; moreover, bunches of subsequent structures from the astrocyte have been emphasized, revealing a self-similarity property. We conducted a detailed analysis in a Zeeman laser model, but we also observed astrocytes in many other DSs. The multiperiodicity exhibited by the astrocytes in their soma gives rise to harlequin dress-like patterns and tri-, quad-, and quint-critical points, which indicate the coexistence of different higher-order periodicities. In the concave borders of the soma, a doubling cascade of quint-points emerges as a bifurcation in the PP, defining regions of ordered sequences of higher periodicity in the route to chaos.
Cite
@article{arxiv.2604.27094,
title = {Astrocytes: Arnol'd Tongues Generalization in Dynamical Systems' Parameter Plane},
author = {Gonzalo Marcelo Ramírez-Ávila and S. Leo Kingston and Marek Balcerzak and Jérôme Daquin and Timoteo Carletti and Tomasz Kapitaniak},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2604.27094},
year = {2026}
}
Comments
Manuscript: 16 pages, 3 figures and 68 references. Supplemental material: 14 pages, 10 figures and one table