Research news on Chaos

Chaos, as a research area, investigates the behavior of deterministic nonlinear dynamical systems that exhibit sensitive dependence on initial conditions, leading to aperiodic, seemingly random evolution in phase space despite underlying determinism. It encompasses the study of strange attractors, bifurcation structures, Lyapunov exponents, fractal dimensions, and invariant measures, with applications across physics, chemistry, biology, engineering, and economics. Research in chaos focuses on rigorous characterization of chaotic regimes, routes to chaos (such as period-doubling and intermittency), control and synchronization of chaotic systems, and numerical and analytical methods for modeling, predicting, and quantifying complex spatiotemporal dynamics.

Boron arsenide semiconductor sets record in quantum vibrations

You may not be able to hear it, but all solid materials make a sound. In fact, atoms—bound in lattices of chemical bonds—are never silent nor still: Under the placid surface of each and every object in our surroundings, a ...

Predicting RNA activity expands therapeutic possibilities

With AI, it's now possible for researchers to predict the three-dimensional structures of proteins directly from their amino-acid sequences. But what biologists really want to predict, says Columbia biophysicist Hashim Al-Hashimi, ...

Warning of kidney cell damage from high exposure to nanoplastics

As concerns rise about the effects of tiny plastic particles on human health, Flinders University researchers have led new research on whether nanoplastics can accumulate or cause damage in kidneys—our body's major blood ...

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