The synchronization of chaos is a well-known topic which attracted the attention of the scientific community in the last two decades. However, the robustness of the synchronous state has been not widely studied, especially considering real cases in which the effects introduced by the physical channel through which chaotic circuits interact, may deeply influence the quality of synchronization and even the onset of it. In this paper, the synchronization of two chaotic circuit coupled through a non– ideal channel is investigated. In particular, the effects of channels introducing a frequency–independent or frequency–dependent time–delay are investigated. Furthermore, two different design strategies to obtain a linear compensation block able to compen- sate the considered channel effects are presented and the recovery of the synchronous state is discussed.
Self-organizing systems arise in many different fields. In this work we analyze data from social and biological systems. A central question is to demonstrate the presence of the determinism in time-series extracted from such systems that appear apparently not correlated but that are two good benchmarks for the study of complexity in real systems. We will apply the Kaplan test and we will define an order parameter for the biological data to characterize the complexity of the system.
In this work, the collective behavior of Artemia Salina is studied both experimentally and theoretically. Several experiments have been designed to investigate the Artemia motion under different environment conditions. From the results of such experiments, a strategy to control the direction of motion of an Artemia population, by exploiting their sensitivity to light, has been derived and then implemented.
In coordination of a group of mobile robots in a real environment, the formation is an important task. Multi- mobile robot formations in global knowledge environments are achieved using small robots with small hardware capabilities. To perform formation, localization, orientation, path planning and obstacle and collision avoidance should be accomplished. Finally, several static and dynamic strategies for polygon shape formation are implemented. For these formations minimizing the energy spent by the robots or the time for achieving the task, have been investigated. These strategies have better efficiency in completing the formation, since they use the cluster matching algorithm instead of the triangulation algorithm.