Strong isochronism of a center and a focus for systems with homogeneous nonlinearities (Q731610): Difference between revisions

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Property / author: Alexander Rudenok / rank
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Property / author: Alexander Rudenok / rank
 
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Property / cites work: Isochronous and strongly isochronous oscillations of two-dimensional monodromic holomorphic dynamical systems / rank
 
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Property / cites work: Linearization of isochronous centers / rank
 
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Property / cites work: Isochronous centers of a linear center perturbed by fourth degree homogeneous polynomial / rank
 
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Property / cites work: Isochronous centers of a linear center perturbed by fifth degree homogeneous polynomials / rank
 
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Property / cites work: Q3772536 / rank
 
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Latest revision as of 01:05, 2 July 2024

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Strong isochronism of a center and a focus for systems with homogeneous nonlinearities
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    Strong isochronism of a center and a focus for systems with homogeneous nonlinearities (English)
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    8 October 2009
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    Given a real polynomial planar differential equation \[ x'=-y+p_n(x,y),~y'=x+q_n(x,y), \] where \(p_n\) and \(q_n\) are homogeneous polynomials of degree \(n\geq2,\) the author proposes a new method to detect isochronism. It is based on the existence of a transformation, \(X=x+f(x,y)\), \(Y=y,\) that converts it into a system of the form \[ X'=-Y+X\,S(X,Y),~Y'=X+Y\,S(X,Y). \] Notice that in polar coordinates this last system writes as \(\theta'=1\) and so it has at the origin either an isochronous center, or an isochronous focus. The author applies this method when \(2\leq n\leq 5\) and gives a list of isochronous centers and foci. As fas as the reviewer knows, some of the given systems exhibiting isochronism are new. It is also noticed in the paper that this method always provides so called strong isochronous systems because the transformation leaves the \(x\)-axis invariant and the systems present isochronism with respect to it.
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    isochronous center
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    isochronous focus
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    normal form
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    homogeneous nonlinearities
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