- Series
- Research Horizons Seminar
- Time
- Wednesday, October 10, 2018 - 12:20pm for 1 hour (actually 50 minutes)
- Location
- Skiles 005
- Speaker
- Guillermo Goldsztein – Georgia Tech
- Organizer
- Trevor Gunn
In 1665, Huygens
discovered that, when two pendulum clocks hanged
from a same wooden beam supported by two chairs, they synchronize in
anti-phase mode. Metronomes provides a second example of oscillators
that synchronize. As it can be seen in many YouTube videos,
metronomes synchronize in-phase when oscillating on top of the same
movable surface. In this talk, we will review these phenomena, introduce
a mathematical model, and analyze the the different physical effects.
We show that, in a certain parameter regime, the
increase of the amplitude of the oscillations leads to a bifurcation from the anti-phase synchronization being stable to the in-phase synchronization being stable. This may explain the experimental
observations.