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Controlling High-Dimensional Chaos in Optical Devices

Daniel J. Gauthier-2005-07-22-Defense Technical Information Center (DTIC)
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TL;DRAbstract

The primary purpose of the proposed program is to develop methods for controlling and synchronizing the behavior of optical and electronic systems that display complicated behavior, such as high-dimensional chaos and turbulent-like behavior. The results of the program have the following potential applications: increasing the coherence of high-power lasers and nonlinear optical devices, developing an entirely new class of high-speed digital communications system based on chaotic elements, devising ultra-high speed methods for generating random numbers for distributed communications networks, and in new techniques for computing with chaotic systems. The authors are especially interested in determining techniques for controlling systems that show complexity in both space and time. Specifically, they are trying to understand whether the behavior of such systems can be controlled by applying perturbations to the system at one or a few control locations, rather than at every spatial point of

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The primary purpose of the proposed program is to develop methods for controlling and synchronizing the behavior of optical and electronic systems that display complicated behavior, such as high-dimensional chaos and turbulent-like behavior. The results of the program have the following potential applications: increasing the coherence of high-power lasers and nonlinear optical devices, developing an entirely new class of high-speed digital communications system based on chaotic elements, devising ultra-high speed methods for generating random numbers for distributed communications networks, and in new techniques for computing with chaotic systems. The authors are especially interested in determining techniques for controlling systems that show complexity in both space and time. Specifically, they are trying to understand whether the behavior of such systems can be controlled by applying perturbations to the system at one or a few control locations, rather than at every spatial point of

Keywords

SynchronizingComputer scienceChaoticOptical chaosSemiconductor laser theoryCommunications systemOptical communicationIntermittency

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