Abstract
Abstract. A four-dimensional nonlinear spectral ocean model is used
to study the transition to chaos induced by periodic forcing in systems that
are nonchaotic in the autonomous limit. The analysis relies on the
construction of the system's pullback attractors (PBAs) through ensemble
simulations, based on a large number of initial states in the remote past. A
preliminary analysis of the autonomous system is carried out by investigating
its bifurcation diagram, as well as by calculating a metric that measures the
mean distance between two initially nearby trajectories, along with the
system's entropy. We find that nonchaotic attractors can still exhibit
sensitive dependence on initial data over some time interval; this apparent
paradox is resolved by noting that the dependence only concerns the phase of
the periodic trajectories, and that it disappears once the latter have
converged onto the attractor. The periodically forced system, analyzed by the
same methods, yields periodic or chaotic PBAs depending on the periodic
forcing's amplitude ε. A new diagnostic method – based on the
cross-correlation between two initially nearby trajectories – is proposed
to characterize the transition between the two types of behavior. Transition
to chaos is found to occur abruptly at a critical value εc
and begins with the intermittent emergence of periodic oscillations with
distinct phases. The same diagnostic method is finally shown to be a useful
tool for autonomous and aperiodically forced systems as well.
Cited by
17 articles.
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