Self-Organization Autowaves and Structures Far from Equilibrium

According to its definition, Synergetics is concerned with systems that produce macroscopic spatial, temporal, or functional structures. Autowaves are·a specific, yet very important, case of spatio-temporal structures. The term "autowave" was coined in the Soviet Union in analogy to the te...

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Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: Krinsky, V.I. (Editor)
Format: eBook
Language:English
Published: Berlin, Heidelberg Springer Berlin Heidelberg 1984, 1984
Edition:1st ed. 1984
Series:Springer Series in Synergetics
Subjects:
Online Access:
Collection: Springer Book Archives -2004 - Collection details see MPG.ReNa
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245 0 0 |a Self-Organization  |h Elektronische Ressource  |b Autowaves and Structures Far from Equilibrium  |c edited by V.I. Krinsky 
250 |a 1st ed. 1984 
260 |a Berlin, Heidelberg  |b Springer Berlin Heidelberg  |c 1984, 1984 
300 |a XII, 266 p  |b online resource 
505 0 |a Synergetics and Biological Morphogenesis -- Collective Phenomena in the Multicellular Development of Dictyostelium Discoideur. -- Study of “Target Patterns” in a Phage-Bacterium System -- Plasmodium of the Myxomycete Physarum Polycephalum as an Autowave Self-Organizing System. -- VI Evolution and Self-Organization -- Violation of Symmetry and Self-Organization in Prebiological Evolution -- Physical Models of Evolution Processes -- Experimental and Theoretical Studies of the Regulatory Hierarchy in Glycolysis -- Evolution and Value of Information -- Index of Contributors 
505 0 |a Topological Similarities in Dissipative Structures of Marangoni-Instabi1ity and Belousov-Zhabotinsky-Reaction. -- A Generalized Mechanism for Bromate-Driven Oscillators -- Electrical Field Effects on Propagating Pulse and Front Waves -- Self-Organization Phenomena and Autowave Processes in Heterogeneous Chemical and Physical Systems. -- Threshold Effects and Autowave Processes in Low-Temperature Solid-State Chemical Reactions. -- Spatial Structures and Pattern Selection in Chemical Systems -- Simulation of Self-Organized States in Combustion Processes -- V Autowaves in Biological Systems -- Leão’s Spreading Depression, an Example of Diffusion-Mediated Propagation of Excitation in the Central Nervous System. -- The Autowave Nature of Cardiac Arrhythmias -- Cardiac Arrhythmias During Acute Myocardial Ischemia -- Properties of Rotating Waves in Three Dimensions. Scroll Rings in Myocard -- Waves and Structures in Space: Ecology and Epidemiology --  
505 0 |a Stochastization of Nonstationary Structures in a Distributed Oscillator with Delay. -- Experimental Study of Rossby Solitons and Dissipative Structures in Geostrophical Streams. -- III Mathematical Backgrounds of Autowaves -- A Theory of Spiral Waves in Active Media -- One-Dimensional Autowaves, Methods of Qualitative Description -- Twisted Scroll Waves in Three-Dimensional Active Media -- On the Complex Stationary Nearly Solitary Waves -- Elements of the “Optics” of Autowaves -- Numerical Simulation and Nonlinear Processes in Dissipative Media -- The Onset and the Development of Chaotic Structures in Dissipative Media -- IV Autowaves and Auto-Oscillations in Chemically Active Media -- Mathematical Models of Chemically Active Media -- On the Mechanism of Target Pattern Formation in the Distributed Belousov-Zhabotinsky System. -- Iodide-Induced Oscillation inUncatalyzed Bromate Oscillators --  
505 0 |a I Introduction -- Synergetics - Some Basic Concepts and Recent Results -- Autowaves: Results, Problems, Outlooks -- II Self-Organization in Physical Systems: Autowaves and Structures Far from Equilibrium -- The Microscopic Theory of Irreversible Processes -- Coherent Structures in Plasmas. -- Structures in the Universe. -- Interfacial Instability in Fluid Layers Under Thermal Constraints -- Laser-Induced Autowave Processes -- Completely Integrable Models in the Domain Walls and Interphases Theories -- The Autowave Phenomena on the Surface of Crystallizing Solution -- Autowave Processes in Semiconductors with the Temperature-Electric Instability -- Thermal Wave Propagation in a Superconducting System as an Autowave Process -- Theory of Development of Large-Scale Structures in Hydrodynamical Turbulence -- The Role of Fluctuations for Self-Organization in Physical Systems (an Exemplary Case of Transition from a Laminar to Turbulent Flow) --  
653 |a Physical chemistry 
653 |a Physical Chemistry 
653 |a Mathematical physics 
653 |a Biochemistry 
653 |a Biophysics 
653 |a Theoretical, Mathematical and Computational Physics 
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989 |b SBA  |a Springer Book Archives -2004 
490 0 |a Springer Series in Synergetics 
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520 |a According to its definition, Synergetics is concerned with systems that produce macroscopic spatial, temporal, or functional structures. Autowaves are·a specific, yet very important, case of spatio-temporal structures. The term "autowave" was coined in the Soviet Union in analogy to the term "auto-oscillator". This is - perhaps too literal - translation of the Russian word "avto-ostsillyatory" (= self­ oscillator) which in its proper translation means "self-sustained oscillator". These are oscillators, e. g. , clocks, whose internal energy dissipation is compensa­ ted by a (more or less) continuous power input. Simi larly, the term "autowaves" de­ notes propagation effects - including waves - in active media, which provide spa­ tially distributed energy sources and thus may compensate dissipation. An example which is now famous is represented by spiral or concentric waves in a chemically active medium, undergoing the Belousov-Zhabotinsky reaction. This book provides the reader with numerous further examples from physics, chem­ istry, and biology - e. g. , autowaves of the heart. While the Belousov-Zhabotinsky reaction is now widely known, a number of very important results obtained in the Soviet Union are perhaps less well known. I am particularly glad that this book may help to make readers outside the Soviet Union acquainted with these important exper­ imental and theoretical findings which are presented in a way which elucidates the common principles underlying this kind of propagation effects. Professor V.