One can also write a time-independent
Hamiltonian formalism for the Van der Pol oscillator by augmenting it to a four-dimensional autonomous dynamical system using an auxiliary second-order nonlinear differential equation as follows: :\ddot{x}-\mu(1-x^2)\dot{x}+x=0, :\ddot{y}+\mu(1-x^2)\dot{y}+y=0. Note that the dynamics of the original Van der Pol oscillator is not affected due to the one-way coupling between the time-evolutions of
x and
y variables. A Hamiltonian
H for this system of equations can be shown to be :H(x,y,p_x,p_y)=p_xp_y+xy-\mu(1-x^2)yp_y, where p_x=\dot{y} + \mu(1-x^2)y and p_y=\dot{x} are the
conjugate momenta corresponding to
x and
y, respectively. This may, in principle, lead to quantization of the Van der Pol oscillator. Such a Hamiltonian also connects the
geometric phase of the limit cycle system having time dependent parameters with the
Hannay angle of the corresponding Hamiltonian system.
Quantum oscillator The quantum van der Pol oscillator, which is the
quantum mechanical version of the classical van der Pol oscillator, has been proposed using a
Lindblad equation to study its quantum dynamics and
quantum synchronization. Note the above Hamiltonian approach with an auxiliary second-order equation produces unbounded phase-space trajectories and hence cannot be used to quantize the van der Pol oscillator. In the limit of weak nonlinearity (i.e.
μ→0) the van der Pol oscillator reduces to the
Stuart–Landau equation. The Stuart–Landau equation in fact describes an entire class of limit-cycle oscillators in the weakly-nonlinear limit. The form of the classical Stuart–Landau equation is much simpler, and perhaps not surprisingly, can be quantized by a Lindblad equation which is also simpler than the Lindblad equation for the van der Pol oscillator. The quantum Stuart–Landau model has played an important role in the study of quantum synchronisation (where it has often been called a van der Pol oscillator although it cannot be uniquely associated with the van der Pol oscillator). The relationship between the classical Stuart–Landau model (
μ→0) and more general limit-cycle oscillators (arbitrary
μ) has also been demonstrated numerically in the corresponding quantum models. ==Forced Van der Pol oscillator==