Higher-order synchronization on the sphere
Abstract
We construct a system of N interacting particles on the unit sphere Sd-1 in d-dimensional space, which has d-body interactions only. The equations have a gradient formulation derived from a rotationally-invariant potential of a determinantal form summed over all nodes, with antisymmetric coefficients. For d=3, for example, all trajectories lie on the 2-sphere and the potential is constructed from the triple scalar product summed over all oriented 2-simplices. We investigate the cases d=3,4,5 in detail, and find that the system synchronizes from generic initial values, for both positive and negative coupling coefficients, to a static final configuration in which the particles lie equally spaced on Sd-1. Completely synchronized configurations also exist, but are unstable under the d-body interactions. We compare the relative effect of 2-body and d-body forces by adding the well-studied 2-body interactions to the potential, and find that higher-order interactions enhance the synchronization of the system, specifically, synchronization to a final configuration consisting of equally spaced particles occurs for all d-body and 2-body coupling constants of any sign, unless the attractive 2-body forces are sufficiently strong relative to the d-body forces. In this case the system completely synchronizes as the 2-body coupling constant increases through a positive critical value, with either a continuous transition for d=3, or discontinuously for d=5. Synchronization also occurs if the nodes have distributed natural frequencies of oscillation, provided that the frequencies are not too large in amplitude, even in the presence of repulsive 2-body interactions which by themselves would result in asynchronous behaviour.
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