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Session 1 Nonlinear Sciences Chairs: Qi Ouyang (Peking University, China) Wei Wang (Nanjing University, China) Titles and Abstracts Dwight Barkley (University of Warwick, UK) Title: Having fun with Adjoints and Spiral Waves Abstract: I will describe some problems in the dynamics of PDEs for which numerically solving adjoint problems provides valuable insight. I will focus on the dynamics of spiral and scroll waves in excitable media. I will show how the computation of Response Functions (adjoints to Goldstone modes) allows one to predict and understand a variety of interesting dynamics of these waves, and provides a basis for their control. Andrew Birrell (University of Queensland, Australia) Title: Solvability of BEC/BCS crossover Hamiltonians Abstract: In the last several decades a prolific field of research has flourished, dedicated to constructing and analysing exactly solvable quantum models. The understanding of quantum integrability that made such analysis tractable finds its origin in the melding of the Quantum Inverse Scattering Method and Bethe ansatz techniques. This approach can be complicated and difficult to implement. In some instances an ability to extend the exact solutions to the most general Hamiltonians to which they are applicable is outside the scope of such techniques. In this presentation, I will highlight results of a recent paper [1] demonstrating an alternative method, that enables such a determination. Remarkably this determination does not rely on any prior knowledge of integrability through the existence of a set of conserved operators. In particular, we derive the solvability conditions for a general family of Hamiltonians describing the crossover between the low-temperature phenomena of superconductivity, in the Bardeen–Cooper-Schrieffer theory, and Bose-Einstein condensation. We then determine the manifolds in the coupling parameter space for which these Hamiltonians can be solved exactly. [1] A Birrell, J Links, and P S Isaac, A variational approach for the quantum inverse scattering method, Inverse Problems 28 035008, 2012. Chong-Qing Cheng (Nanjing University, China) Title: Arnold diffusion and Dynamical Instability of Hamiltonian systems Abstract: Since the time of Henri Poincare, it has been a center problem in the field of dynamical systems whether Hamitonian systems are dynamically stable or not. Closely related to it, there is a conjecture of V.I. Arnold, raised almost half century ago, i.e. there exist orbits along which the slow (action) variable undergoes substantial variation. This phenomenon is now called Arnold diffusion. In this talk, I shall present a survey, from mathematical point of view, on recent progress about this subject. Steve Gross (University of California Irvine, USA) Title: Abstract: Gang Hu (Beijing Normal University, China) Title: Chaotic motifs in genomic regulatory networks Abstract: Chaos should occur often in gene regulatory networks (GRNs) which have been widely described by nonlinear coupled ordinary differential equations, if their dimensions are no less than 3. It is therefore puzzling that chaos has never been reported in GRNs in nature and is also extremely rare in models of GRNs. On the other hand, the topic of motifs has attracted great attention in studying biological networks, and network motifs are suggested to be elementary building blocks that carry out some key functions in the network. In this talk, chaotic motifs (subnetworks with chaos) in GRNs are discussed. The conclusion is that: (i) chaos can only appear through competitions between different oscillatory modes with rivaling intensities. Conditions required for chaotic GRNs are found to be very strict, which make chaotic GRNs extremely rare. (ii) Chaotic motifs are explored as the simplest few-node structures capable of producing chaos, and serve as the intrinsic source of chaos of random fewnode GRNs. Several optimal motifs causing chaos with atypically high probability are figured out. (iii) Moreover, we discovered that a number of special oscillators can never produce chaos. These structures bring some advantages on rhythmic functions and may help us understand the robustness of diverse biological rhythms. (iv) The methods of dominant phase-advanced driving (DPAD) and DPAD time fraction are proposed to quantitatively identify chaotic motifs and to explain the origin of chaotic behaviors in GRNs. Baowen Li (National University of Singapore, Singapore and Tongji University, China) Title: Phononics: manipulating heat flow with electronic analog and beyond Abstract: The form of energy termed heat that typically derives from lattice vibrations, i.e. the phonons, is usually considered as waste energy and, moreover, deleterious to information processing. However, in this talk, we attempt to rebut this common view: By use of tailored models we demonstrate that phonons can be manipulated like electrons and photons can, thus enabling controlled heat transport. Moreover, we explain that phonons can be put to beneficial use to carry and process information. In a first part we present ways to control heat transport and how to process information for physical systems which are driven by a temperature bias. Particularly, we put forward the toolkit of familiar electronic analogs for exercising phononics; i.e. phononic devices which act as thermal diodes, thermal transistors, thermal logic gates and thermal memories, etc.. These concepts are then put to work to transport, control and rectify heat in physical realistic nanosystems by devising practical designs of hybrid nanostructures that permit the operation of functional phononic devices and, as well, report first experimental realizations. Next, we discuss yet richer possibilities to manipulate heat flow by use of time varying thermal bath temperatures or various other external fields. These give rise to a plenty of intriguing phononic nonequilibrium phenomena as for example the directed shuttling of heat, a geometrical phase induced heat pumping, or the phonon Hall effect, that all may find its way into operation with electronic analogs. References: [1] N. B Li, J. Ren, G Zhang, L Wang, P Hanggi, and B Li, Rev. Mod. Phys. 84, 1045 (2012) Feng Liu (Nanjing University, China) Title: The dynamics and functions of the p53 network Abstract: The tumor suppressor p53 lies at the hub of cellular signaling networks that are activated by various stress signals. As a nuclear transcription factor, p53 can regulate expression of a large number of target genes. The levels, subcellular localization, posttranslational modifications, and cofactors of p53 all mediate its function and dynamics. We have proposed integrated models of the p53 network and explored how the p53 pathway responds to DNA damage and energy stress by numerical simulations. We found that p53 can induce distinct cellular outcomes including cell cycle arrest, senescence, and apoptosis. We characterized the dynamics of the p53 network in detail and revealed the underlying molecular mechanisms for the cellular responses to stresses. Jie Liu (Institute of Applied Physics and Computational Mathematics, China) Title: Adiabatic theory for Bose-Einstein Condensate (BEC) Abstract: We investigate adiabatic evolution of quantum states as governed by the nonlinear Schro¨dinger equation and provide examples of applications with a nonlinear tunneling model for Bose-Einstein condensates. Our analysis not only spells out conditions for adiabatic evolution of eigenstates but also characterizes the motion of noneigenstates which cannot be obtained from the former in the absence of the superposition principle. We also investigate the Berry phase acquired by an eigenstate that experienced a nonlinear adiabatic evolution. The circuit integral of the Berry connection of the instantaneous eigenstate cannot account for the adiabatic geometric phase, while the Bogoliubov excitations around the eigenstates are found to be accumulated during the nonlinear adiabatic evolution and contribute a finite phase of geometric nature. Some possible applications of our theory are discussed. References: 1)Jie Liu, Biao Wu, and Qian Niu, "Nonlinear evolution of quantum states in the adiabatic regime", Physical Review Letters 90, 170404 (2003) 2)B.Wu and Jie Liu, "Commutability between the Semiclassical and Adiabatic Limits",Phys. Rev. Lett. 96, 020405 (2006) 3)Jie Liu and L.B.Fu, "Berry Phase in Nonlinear Systems", Phys. Rev. A 81, 052112 (2010) 4)Sheng-Chang Li, Li-Bin Fu, and Jie Liu, "Adiabatic geometric phase for a Bose-Einstein condensate coupled to a cavity" ,Phys. Rev. A 84, 053610 (2011) Laurette Tuckerman (ESPCI, France) Title: Hexagonal Faraday waves Abstract: When a fluid layer is subjected to vertical oscillation, subharmonic standing waves form at its surface; this is the famous instability described by Faraday in 1831. The patterns first observed were classic: stripes, squares and hexagons. The discovery in the 1990s of more complicated spatial structures such as quasicrystalline patterns, superlattices and oscillons led to a resurgence of theoretical interest. Surprisingly, the Faraday instability has been little studied numerically, with the first 2D simulation carried out in 2000 by Chen. The first 3D simulation, carried out by our group using a front-tracking/immersed-boundary method, reproduced the experimental hexagonal standing waves; the variation of the interface height over one oscillation period is illustrated above. These waves are succeeded, however, by long-time recurrent alternation between new patterns we have called quasi-hexagonal and beaded stripes, interconnected by new spatio-temporal symmetries. Bing-Hong Wang (University of Science and Technology of China, China) Title: Transportation Dynamics on Networks of Mobile Agents Based on the Greedy Routing Abstract: Due to the increasing importance of communication networks such as the Internet and networks of mobile phone users in modern society, the traffic of information flows in these networks have attracted more and more attention. In communication networks, information packets are forwarded from sources to destinations by specific routing protocol. To enhance the transportation capacity of communication networks, researchers have designed various routing algorithms, including the shortest path, the integration of static and dynamic information, the local routing, the efficient routing, the pheromone routing protocol, the greedy algorithm, and so on. Previous studies about traffic dynamics usually focus on static networks, where nodes are motionless and links among nodes keep fixed. In our recent paper [1], we studied the transportation dynamics on networks of mobile agents. We assume that agents move on a plane and the searching area of an agent is a circle centered at itself. In that paper, information packets were delivered according to random routing algorithm, that is, a packet at an agent is forwarded to another randomly chosen agent in its’ searching area. The random routing can be applied in the case where moving agents cannot obtain the information about other agents’ positions. However, if an agent can know other agents’ positions, the random routing is not an effective algorithm for a packet to quickly reach the destination. Utilizing the information of agents’ positions, we now propose a greedy routing for networks of mobile agents. In the greedy routing, every time step a packet at an agent is delivered to another agent whose distance f r om the destination is shortest among all the agents in the searched neighbor region. We have found that the greedy routing markedly enhances the transportation capacity of networks compared with random routing. Based on the greedy routing, We find that the transportation capacity of t h e network increases as the communication radius increases. The transportation capacity of networks reaches the highest at the moderate moving speed. We also find that the average delivering time increases as the moving speed increases but decreases as the communication radius increases. [1] Yang H-X, Wang W-X, Xie Y-B, Lai Y-C and Wang B-H, Phys. Rev. E 83, (2011) 016102 Zhigang Zheng (Beijing Normal University, China) Title: Nonlinear wave dynamics of the Transport Process on Nonlinear Lattices Abstract: Energy transport on nonlinear lattices may exhibit novel wave behaviors such as solitary waves, phonons, discrete breathers, and so on. We discuss the nonlinear wave dynamics and explore their macroscopic consequences in transport process such as diffusion and heat conductions. Changsong Zhou (Hong Kong Baptist University, Hong Kong, China) Title: Avalanche Dynamics in Hierarchical Neural Networks Abstract: Cerebral cortical brain networks possess a number of prominent features of structure and dynamics in the systems level. Firstly, they are structured hierarchically, from large-scale regions of the whole brain, via cortical areas and area sub-compartments organized as structural and functional maps, to cortical columns, and finally circuits made up of individual neurons. Due to this organization of hierarchical modular network, the connectivity of the local neural network can be quite dense, while the whole network is very sparse. A balance of excitation and inhibition also features local recurrent neural network. Second, the networks display self-organized sustained activity, which is persistent in the absence of external stimuli. At the systems level, such activity is characterized by complex rhythmical oscillations over a broadband background, while at the cellular level; neuronal discharges have been observed to display avalanches, indicating that cortical networks are at the state of self-organized criticality. In this talk, I will present our recent study about the impact of hierarchical modular organization in balanced neural network on the generation of sustained critical avalanches dynamics and the potential function role in information processing.