Chaos

Chaos: Celebrating 25 years of Chaos

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2015 marks the silver anniversary of Chaos: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Nonlinear Science. Featured here are special article collections and activities to commemorate this significant year.

Select a section below:

Visit our 25th Anniversary page for celebration updates!

The Chaos collection 25 Articles for 25 Years celebrates the Journal’s contributions to the nonlinear dynamics community and to the advancement of science. Editor-in-Chief David Campbell has chosen one article from every year of the Journal’s publication to represent the depth and breadth of nonlinear science historically and today. Articles were chosen for their importance to the community, for their impact on the direction of nonlinear science, and to reflect the variety of exciting research in nonlinear science undertaken all over the world.

 

Editor-in-Chief: David K. Campbell

Boston University, Boston, MA, USA

1991

1992

1993

Quantum‐chaotic scattering effects in semiconductor microstructures
Harold U. Baranger, Rodolfo A. Jalabert, A. Douglas Stone
Chaos 3, 665 (1993)

1994

1995

1996

1997

Fundamentals of synchronization in chaotic systems, concepts, and applications
Louis M. Pecora, Thomas L. Carroll, Gregg A. Johnson, Douglas J. Mar, James F. Heagy
Chaos 7, 520 (1997)

1998

Minireview of stochastic resonance
Kurt Wiesenfeld, Fernan Jaramillo
Chaos 8, 539 (1998)

1999

2000

2001

Designer gene networks: Towards fundamental cellular control
Jeff Hasty, Farren Isaacs, Milos Dolnik, David McMillen, J. J. Collins
Chaos 11, 207 (2001)

2002

2003

2004

An approach to chaotic synchronization
Alexander E. Hramov, Alexey A. Koronovskii
Chaos 14, 603 (2004)

2005

2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

Vibrational resonance in neuron populations
Bin Deng, Jiang Wang, Xile Wei, K. M. Tsang, W. L. Chan
Chaos 20, 013113 (2010)

2011

Evolutionary games defined at the network mesoscale: The Public Goods game
Jesús Gómez-Gardeñes, Miguel Romance, Regino Criado, Daniele Vilone, Angel Sánchez
Chaos 21, 016113 (2011)

2012

2013

Robust detection of dynamic community structure in networks
Danielle S. Bassett, Mason A. Porter, Nicholas F. Wymbs, Scott T. Grafton, Jean M. Carlson, Peter J. Mucha
Chaos 23, 013142 (2013)

2014

How well-connected is the surface of the global ocean?
Gary Froyland, Robyn M. Stuart, Erik van Sebille
Chaos 24, 033126 (2014)

2015

Coming Soon!

We celebrate 25 years of publications in Chaos: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Nonlinear Science by publishing a special issue that spans the vast field that we call nonlinear dynamics. Our authors (listed below with their topics) were chosen because of their knowledge about this field and their contributions to it over the past quarter century. Many of them have also served in important roles in the journal under the guidance of Editor-in-Chief David Campbell. The articles, which are meant to be generally accessible to readers of this journal, are intended to give a general sense of the corresponding area: its roots, its development, and its potential future path. This Focus Issue will publish in September 2015.

Published Articles:

Quantum and wave dynamical chaos in superconducting microwave billiards
B. Dietz, A. Richter
Chaos 25, 097601 (2015)

Invariant manifolds and global bifurcations

John Guckenheimer, Bernd Krauskopf, Hinke M. Osinga, Björn Sandstede
Chaos 25, 097604 (2015)

Dynamical disease: Challenges for nonlinear dynamics and medicine

Leon Glass
Chaos 25, 097603 (2015)

Chaos, patterns, coherent structures, and turbulence: Reflections on nonlinear science

Robert E. Ecke
Chaos 25, 097605 (2015)

Thirty years of turnstiles and transport

J. D. Meiss
Chaos 25, 097602 (2015)

Cycles, randomness, and transport from chaotic dynamics to stochastic processes

Pierre Gaspard
Chaos 25, 097606 (2015)

Self-organization of pulsing and bursting in a CO2 laser with opto-electronic feedback

Joana G. Freire, Riccardo Meucci, Fortunato Tito Arecchi, Jason A. C. Gallas
Chaos 25, 097607 (2015)

Complex network based techniques to identify extreme events and (sudden) transitions in spatio-temporal systems

Norbert Marwan, Jürgen Kurths
Chaos 25, 097609 (2015)

From globally coupled maps to complex-systems biology

Kunihiko Kaneko
Chaos 25, 097608 (2015)

Nonlinear time-series analysis revisited

Elizabeth Bradley, Holger Kantz
Chaos 25, 097610 (2015)

Synchronization of chaotic systems

Louis M. Pecora, Thomas L. Carroll
Chaos 25, 097611 (2015)

Recent advances in symmetric and network dynamics

Martin Golubitsky, Ian Stewart
Chaos 25, 097612 (2015)

From chemical systems to systems chemistry: Patterns in space and time

Kenneth Showalter, Irving R. Epstein
Chaos 25, 097613 (2015)

Coming Soon


Order in Chaos

Leonid Bunimovich and Luz Vianey Vela-Arevalo   

 

Control and Chaotic Dynamics

Bill Ditto and Sudeshna Sinha


Control of Network Dynamics

Adilson Motter


Defining Chaos

Ed Ott and Brian Hunt

  

Nonlinear Waves & Solitons

Lev Ostrovsky    

  

Lagrangian Flow & Dynamics

Thomas Peacock              

  

Network and Phase Synchronization

Arcady Pikovsky and Michael Rosenblum          

  

Granular Materials

Troy Shinbrot


The Joy of Transient Chaos

Tamas Tel

25 Years of Achievement of

Dr. David K. Campbell, Retiring Founding Editor-in-Chief of Chaos:

Cocktail Reception

(During the SIAM Conference on Applications of Dynamical Systems)

Tuesday, May 19, 2015

6-8 p.m.

The Aerie Restaurant

The Cliff Lodge, Level 10

Snowbird Ski and Summer Resort


RSVP to Cherie Schleifer at cschleifer@aip.org

As part of the celebrations that will mark the 25th anniversary of Chaos, the Guest Editors of this Focus Issue invite the readers of Chaos to engage in discussions about the Past, Present, and Future of Nonlinear Science. Interested parties have the opportunity to provide their own answers to core questions that will be addressed by invited authors in this accompanying focus issue “The 25th Anniversary of CHAOS: Perspectives on Nonlinear Science – Past, Present, and Future.”


The core questions are:

1 – What were the most interesting, important, and/or surprising developments in nonlinear science over the past 25 years?

2 – What are the current big challenges and pressing issues in this area?

3 – What do you anticipate will happen and what do you believe should happen in the next 25 years of nonlinear science?


To participate, visit:

http://sites.northwestern.edu/the-chaos-project/

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