Mathematical Research Data Initiative
Main page
Recent changes
Random page
Help about MediaWiki
Create a new Item
Create a new Property
Create a new EntitySchema
Merge two items
In other projects
Discussion
View source
View history
Purge
English
Log in

Optical morphogenesis: Pattern formation and competition in nonlinear optics

From MaRDI portal
Publication:1896545
Jump to:navigation, search

DOI10.1016/0167-2789(95)00110-PzbMath0900.78002MaRDI QIDQ1896545

Fortunato Tito Arecchi

Publication date: 29 August 1995

Published in: Physica D (Search for Journal in Brave)



Mathematics Subject Classification ID

Physical optics (78A10)


Related Items (5)

When is negativity not a problem for the ultradiscrete limit? ⋮ Optical morphogenesis: Pattern formation and competition in nonlinear optics ⋮ Micro-combs: a novel generation of optical sources ⋮ Light driven structuring of glasses ⋮ Probabilistic approach to pattern selection



Cites Work

  • Unnamed Item
  • Unnamed Item
  • Unnamed Item
  • Self-organization. Autowaves and structures far from equilibrium. Proceedings of an International Symposium, Pushchino, USSR, July 18-23, 1983
  • Globally coupled circle maps
  • Singularities and groups in bifurcation theory. Volume II
  • Patterns, space-time chaos and topological defects in nonlinear optics
  • High-dimensional chaos in delayed dynamical systems
  • Optical morphogenesis: Pattern formation and competition in nonlinear optics
  • The chemical basis of morphogenesis
  • Pattern formation outside of equilibrium
  • Space-time complexity in nonlinear optics


This page was built for publication: Optical morphogenesis: Pattern formation and competition in nonlinear optics

Retrieved from "https://portal.mardi4nfdi.de/w/index.php?title=Publication:1896545&oldid=14305437"
Tools
What links here
Related changes
Special pages
Printable version
Permanent link
Page information
MaRDI portal item
This page was last edited on 1 February 2024, at 14:41.
Privacy policy
About MaRDI portal
Disclaimers
Imprint
Powered by MediaWiki