45 research outputs found
Fluctuation-induced Distributed Resonances in Oscillatory Networks
Self-organized network dynamics prevails for systems across physics, biology
and engineering. How external signals generate distributed responses in
networked systems fundamentally underlies their function, yet is far from fully
understood. Here we analyze the dynamic response patterns of oscillatory
networks to fluctuating input signals. We disentangle the impact of the signal
distribution across the network, the signals' frequency contents and the
network topology. We analytically derive qualitatively different dynamic
response patterns and find three frequency regimes: homogeneous responses at
low frequencies, topology-dependent resonances at intermediate frequencies, and
localized responses at high frequencies. The theory faithfully predicts the
network-wide collective responses to regular and irregular, localized and
distributed simulated signals, as well as to real input signals to power grids
recorded from renewable-energy supplies. These results not only provide general
insights into the formation of dynamic response patterns in networked systems
but also suggest regime- and topology-specific design principles underlying
network function.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figure
Decentral Smart Grid Control
Stable operation of complex flow and transportation networks requires balanced supply and demand. For the operation of electric power grids—due to their increasing fraction of renewable energy sources—a pressing challenge is to fit the fluctuations in decentralized supply to the distributed and temporally varying demands. To achieve this goal, common smart grid concepts suggest to collect consumer demand data, centrally evaluate them given current supply and send price information back to customers for them to decide about usage. Besides restrictions regarding cyber security, privacy protection and large required investments, it remains unclear how such central smart grid options guarantee overall stability. Here we propose a Decentral Smart Grid Control, where the price is directly linked to the local grid frequency at each customer. The grid frequency provides all necessary information about the current power balance such that it is sufficient to match supply and demand without the need for a centralized IT infrastructure. We analyze the performance and the dynamical stability of the power grid with such a control system. Our results suggest that the proposed Decentral Smart Grid Control is feasible independent of effective measurement delays, if frequencies are averaged over sufficiently large time intervals
Resonance Raman spectroscopy on whole blood in a microfluidic device with hydrodynamic cell-free layer creation (Conference Presentation)
Fluctuation-induced distributed resonances in oscillatory networks
How do networks respond to fluctuating inputs?—Localized? Homogeneous? Resonant?</jats:p
