R.G. Brewer, J. Hoffnagle, et al.
Nature
Calculations based on coupled Mathieu-Coulomb equations indicate that the transition from transient to stationary chaos for two ions in a Paul trap near the edge of the stability region is due to a boundary crisis. Numerical simulations reproduce the long-lived chaotic transients observed in ion trap experiments, obeying the power-law dependence T(q)(qc-q)- where T is the average transient lifetime and q the dimensionless trap voltage. The unstable, periodic orbits which are fundamental to a heteroclinic boundary crisis were identified and the intersection of their invariant manifolds in the four-dimensional phase space was located, yielding a prediction for qc, the transition point between transient and stationary chaos, that agrees well with the experimental value. This provides a theoretical understanding of a transition which previously has been a subject of controversy. Finally, a heuristic derivation is given for the critical exponent, based on the stability properties of the mediating periodic orbits. Thus solutions of the deterministic, time-dependent equations of motion can be used to accurately describe the duration of transient two-ion chaos near criticality, with only a single free scale factor. © 1994 The American Physical Society.
R.G. Brewer, J. Hoffnagle, et al.
Nature
R.G. Brewer, R.G. DeVoe, et al.
NATO Advanced Study Institute 1984
R.G. Brewer
Physics Letters
J. Hoffnagle, R.G. Brewer
Applied Physics B Laser and Optics