A convex-geometric framework for fully phase-locked states in the finite Kuramoto model
Abstract
We study the finite-size Kuramoto model of all-to-all coupled phase oscillators with heterogeneous natural frequencies and characterize the minimal coupling strength required for the existence of a fully phase-locked equilibrium (in a co-rotating frame). To remove the degeneracy due to uniform phase shifts, we move to a reduced co-rotating frame and assess stability through the Jacobian of the reduced system: a fully phase-locked state is stable when this Jacobian is negative definite. This defines a stability region in the phase space. The Kuramoto vector field maps this region to a convex set in frequency space, so a fully-locked state at coupling K exists exactly when the rescaled frequency vector ω/K lies inside that convex image. The critical coupling K is defined as the smallest coupling strength for which a fully phase-locked equilibrium exists; geometrically, it corresponds to the first intersection of the ray tω with the boundary of this convex set. Building on this convex-geometric structure, we construct an explicit polytope from analytically computable boundary points of the stability region, providing a closed-form upper bound Kb K. The bound is exact for frequencies aligned with polytope vertices and offers a fully explicit outer approximation for general frequency vectors. While not uniformly sharp in a quantitative sense, this construction exposes the underlying geometry of stable fully phase-locking solutions. These results provide a practical use the convex-geometric structure underlying stable fully-locked states in the Kuramoto model.
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