Is this project an undergraduate, graduate, or faculty project?

Graduate

Project Type

individual

Campus

Daytona Beach

Authors' Class Standing

Rogelio Gracia Otalvaro, PhD Student

Lead Presenter's Name

Rogelio Gracia Otalvaro

Lead Presenter's College

DB College of Engineering

Faculty Mentor Name

Bryan C. Watson

Abstract

As technology advances, systems are growing in complexity and interactivity. This complexity in systems can become a problem when operating and understanding them. Resilience Engineering studies system behavior in the face of impacts. However, existing methods to measure resilience are limited by the non-linear and dynamic characteristics of contemporary systems. Bifurcation analysis can present a different perspective into Resilience Engineering by examining mathematically how systems behave under changing situations. The hypothesis of this work is: if Bifurcation analysis is performed to a nonlinear system, then it is possible to get information on the resilient properties of the system. The paper aims to bridge the gap between bifurcation analysis and Resilience Engineering, offering a framework for integrating both approaches. Future efforts will focus on using the framework practically, to improve the framework to make it more accessible, versatile, and reliable.

Did this research project receive funding support (Spark, SURF, Research Abroad, Student Internal Grants, Collaborative, Climbing, or Ignite Grants) from the Office of Undergraduate Research?

No

Share

COinS
 

Bifurcation Analysis for Complex Systems Resilience

As technology advances, systems are growing in complexity and interactivity. This complexity in systems can become a problem when operating and understanding them. Resilience Engineering studies system behavior in the face of impacts. However, existing methods to measure resilience are limited by the non-linear and dynamic characteristics of contemporary systems. Bifurcation analysis can present a different perspective into Resilience Engineering by examining mathematically how systems behave under changing situations. The hypothesis of this work is: if Bifurcation analysis is performed to a nonlinear system, then it is possible to get information on the resilient properties of the system. The paper aims to bridge the gap between bifurcation analysis and Resilience Engineering, offering a framework for integrating both approaches. Future efforts will focus on using the framework practically, to improve the framework to make it more accessible, versatile, and reliable.

 

To view the content in your browser, please download Adobe Reader or, alternately,
you may Download the file to your hard drive.

NOTE: The latest versions of Adobe Reader do not support viewing PDF files within Firefox on Mac OS and if you are using a modern (Intel) Mac, there is no official plugin for viewing PDF files within the browser window.