Persistent tangled vortex rings in generic excitable media
- 1 September 1994
- journal article
- Published by Springer Nature in Nature
- Vol. 371 (6494) , 233-236
- https://doi.org/10.1038/371233a0
Abstract
Excitable media are exemplified by a range of living systems, such as mammalian heart muscle and its cells and Xenopus eggs. They also occur in non-living systems such as the autocatalytic Belousov-Zhabotinsky reaction. In most of these systems, activity patterns, such as concentration waves, typically radiate as spiral waves from a vortex of excitation created by some nonuniform stimulus. In three-dimensional systems, the vortex is commonly a line, and these vortex lines can form linked and knotted rings which contract into compact, particle-like bundles. In most previous work these stable 'organizing centres' have been found to be symmetrical and can be classified topologically. Here I show through numerical studies of a generic excitable medium that the more general configuration of vortex lines is a turbulent tangle, which is robust against changes in the parameters of the system or perturbations to it. In view of their stability, I suggest that these turbulent tangles should be observable in any of the many known excitable media.Keywords
This publication has 23 references indexed in Scilit:
- Waves and stimulus-modulated dynamics in an oscillating olfactory network.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1994
- Microscopic spiral waves reveal positive feedback in subcellular calcium signalingBiophysical Journal, 1993
- A single-pool model for intracellular calcium oscillations and waves in the Xenopus laevis oocyteBiophysical Journal, 1993
- Three-dimensional waves of excitation during Dictyostelium morphogenesis.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1993
- Stationary and drifting spiral waves of excitation in isolated cardiac muscleNature, 1992
- Spiral Calcium Wave Propagation and Annihilation in Xenopus laevis OocytesScience, 1991
- Three-dimensional twisted vortices in an excitable chemical mediumNature, 1990
- Glutamate Induces Calcium Waves in Cultured Astrocytes: Long-Range Glial SignalingScience, 1990
- Spiral waves of spreading depression in the isolated chicken retinaJournal of Neurobiology, 1983
- Rotating Chemical ReactionsScientific American, 1974