Can a Fractional Order Delay Differential Equation be Chaotic Whose Integer-Order Counterpart is Stable?

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Publication:6402818

arXiv2206.10894MaRDI QIDQ6402818FDOQ6402818


Authors: Sachin Bhalekar, Deepa Gupta Edit this on Wikidata


Publication date: 22 June 2022

Abstract: For the fractional order systems [D^alpha x(t)=f(x),quad 0<alphaleq 1,] one can have a critical value of alpha viz alpha* such that the system is stable for 0<alpha<alpha and unstable for alpha<alphaleq1. In general, if such system is stable for some alpha0in(0,1) then it remains stable for all alpha<alpha0. In this paper, we show that there are some delay differential equations [D^alpha x(t)=f(x(t),x(t- au))] of the fractional order which behave in an exactly opposite way. These systems are unstable for higher values of fractional order and stable for the lower values. The striking observation is the example which is chaotic for alpha=0.27 but stable for alpha=1. This cannot be observed in the fractional differential equations (FDEs) without delay. We provide the complete bifurcation scenarios in the scalar FDEs.













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