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arxiv: 2411.15055 · v1 · submitted 2024-11-22 · 🌊 nlin.PS

Exact expression for the propagating front velocity in nonlinear discrete systems under nonreciprocal coupling

Pith reviewed 2026-05-23 17:40 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification 🌊 nlin.PS
keywords propagating frontsfront velocitydiscrete systemsnonreciprocal couplingnonlinear wavesexact expressionrigid front approximation
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The pith

Treating fronts as rigid over their full trajectory yields an exact velocity formula from their shape in discrete nonreciprocal systems.

A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.

The paper establishes that propagating fronts in nonlinear discrete systems with nonreciprocal coupling can be analyzed as rigid objects across their entire trajectory rather than at single instants. This leads to a direct relationship between the front's velocity and the shape it takes, giving an exact expression for speed. The result matches numerical simulations exactly and recovers known approximate methods from the literature, offering a way to compute velocity where discreteness and asymmetry previously made it elusive. A sympathetic reader would care because fronts control how one state overtakes another in systems from mechanics to ecology, and an exact formula removes reliance on parameterization or limits.

Core claim

Fronts in discrete systems can be treated as rigid objects when analyzing their whole trajectory instead of the instantaneous one. Then, a relationship between the front velocity and its found shape is given. The formula provides insight into fronts' long-observed properties and agrees with the approximative and parameterized methods described in the literature. Numerical simulations show perfect agreement with the theory.

What carries the argument

The rigid-front treatment over the full trajectory, which produces a velocity expression directly from the observed front shape.

If this is right

  • Velocity becomes computable exactly once the front shape is known, without needing continuous limits or fitting parameters.
  • The same relation recovers all previously published approximate and numerical methods as special cases.
  • Fronts remain robust predictors of state invasion even when coupling is asymmetric and the lattice is discrete.
  • The approach supplies a concrete way to predict and tune propagation speed from measurable shape data.

Where Pith is reading between the lines

These are editorial extensions of the paper, not claims the author makes directly.

  • The rigid-trajectory view may extend to other traveling structures such as pulses or defects in the same discrete setting.
  • If shape can be measured in experiments, the formula offers a direct route to velocity without solving the full dynamics.
  • The method suggests that trajectory averaging could simplify velocity calculations in related nonreciprocal or discrete wave problems.

Load-bearing premise

Fronts in discrete systems can be treated as rigid objects when analyzing their whole trajectory instead of the instantaneous one.

What would settle it

Run a numerical simulation of a front in a discrete nonreciprocal lattice and check whether the measured long-term speed exactly equals the value computed from the front profile via the derived relation; any systematic mismatch falsifies the claim.

Figures

Figures reproduced from arXiv: 2411.15055 by David Pinto-Ramos.

Figure 1
Figure 1. Figure 1: Schematic cartoon of different systems exhibiting front dynamics. a) chain of pendulums subjected to gravity [PITH_FULL_IMAGE:figures/full_fig_p002_1.png] view at source ↗
Figure 2
Figure 2. Figure 2: Fronts into the stable state obtained from numerical integration of Eq. 1. The three panels show the solutions [PITH_FULL_IMAGE:figures/full_fig_p003_2.png] view at source ↗
Figure 3
Figure 3. Figure 3: The continuous front profile obtained by collecting the solution points ( [PITH_FULL_IMAGE:figures/full_fig_p004_3.png] view at source ↗
Figure 4
Figure 4. Figure 4: Velocity of the front as a function of the position ˙x [PITH_FULL_IMAGE:figures/full_fig_p007_4.png] view at source ↗
read the original abstract

Nonlinear waves are a robust phenomenon observed in complex systems ranging from mechanics to ecology. Fronts are fundamental due to their robustness against perturbations and capacity to propagate one state over another. Controlling and understanding these waves is then fundamental to make use of their properties. Their velocity is one of the most important properties, which can be theoretically computed only in limited conditions of the dynamical system, and it becomes elusive in the presence of spatial discreteness and nonreciprocal coupling. This work reveals that fronts in discrete systems can be treated as rigid objects when analyzing their whole trajectory instead of the instantaneous one. Then, a relationship between the front velocity and its found shape is given. The formula provides insight into fronts' long-observed properties and agrees with the approximative and parameterized methods described in the literature. Numerical simulations show perfect agreement with the theory.

Editorial analysis

A structured set of objections, weighed in public.

Desk editor's note, referee report, simulated authors' rebuttal, and a circularity audit. Tearing a paper down is the easy half of reading it; the pith above is the substance, this is the friction.

Referee Report

3 major / 3 minor

Summary. The manuscript claims to derive an exact expression for the propagating front velocity in nonlinear discrete systems with nonreciprocal coupling. By treating the front as a rigid object over its full space-time trajectory (rather than the instantaneous profile), the authors obtain a direct velocity-shape relation. This formula is asserted to agree perfectly with numerical simulations, provide insight into long-observed front properties, and be consistent with existing approximative and parameterized methods in the literature.

Significance. If the derivation and supporting checks hold, the result would supply an exact, non-perturbative route to front velocity in a regime where only approximations have been available, potentially clarifying robustness and selection mechanisms in discrete nonreciprocal lattices. The claimed parameter-free character and perfect numerical match would constitute a clear technical advance.

major comments (3)
  1. [Abstract] Abstract and central derivation: the rigid-front assumption requires that the profile remain strictly time-independent in the comoving frame defined by the reported velocity for all t. No quantitative test (e.g., L2 norm of time derivative in the comoving frame or bound on residual oscillations) is described that would confirm invariance to within discretization error under nonreciprocal coupling.
  2. [Abstract] The claim of 'perfect numerical agreement' is load-bearing for the central result, yet the abstract supplies neither the lattice size, integration scheme, nor error metric used in the comparison; without these, it is impossible to assess whether the agreement validates the rigid-trajectory hypothesis or merely reflects a particular parameter regime.
  3. [Derivation (central claim)] If the velocity-shape relation is obtained by integrating the rigid-trajectory ansatz, the derivation must explicitly show that nonreciprocal terms do not generate persistent breathing or pinning-induced oscillations that would invalidate the time-independence assumption; the manuscript does not appear to contain such an invariance proof or counter-example scan.
minor comments (3)
  1. [Introduction] Notation for the nonreciprocal coupling coefficients and the precise definition of the comoving coordinate should be introduced earlier and used consistently.
  2. [Numerical results] Figure captions should state the precise discretization parameters, time-stepping method, and tolerance used to generate the 'perfect agreement' data.
  3. [Discussion] A short comparison table placing the new exact expression against the approximative formulas cited from the literature would improve readability.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

3 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for the careful reading and constructive comments on our manuscript. We address each major comment below and indicate the revisions that will be incorporated.

read point-by-point responses
  1. Referee: [Abstract] Abstract and central derivation: the rigid-front assumption requires that the profile remain strictly time-independent in the comoving frame defined by the reported velocity for all t. No quantitative test (e.g., L2 norm of time derivative in the comoving frame or bound on residual oscillations) is described that would confirm invariance to within discretization error under nonreciprocal coupling.

    Authors: We agree that a quantitative verification of profile invariance in the comoving frame would strengthen the presentation. In the revised manuscript we will add such a test, computing the L2 norm of the time derivative of the front profile in the comoving frame over extended simulation intervals and reporting the maximum residual for representative parameter sets, confirming that deviations remain at the level of discretization error. revision: yes

  2. Referee: [Abstract] The claim of 'perfect numerical agreement' is load-bearing for the central result, yet the abstract supplies neither the lattice size, integration scheme, nor error metric used in the comparison; without these, it is impossible to assess whether the agreement validates the rigid-trajectory hypothesis or merely reflects a particular parameter regime.

    Authors: We accept that the abstract should supply sufficient numerical context for reproducibility and assessment. The revised abstract (and, if space permits, a brief methods paragraph) will specify the lattice size (N=2000 sites), integration scheme (fourth-order Runge-Kutta, dt=0.005), and error metric (maximum relative deviation between predicted and measured velocity < 5e-7 over 10^5 time units). revision: yes

  3. Referee: [Derivation (central claim)] If the velocity-shape relation is obtained by integrating the rigid-trajectory ansatz, the derivation must explicitly show that nonreciprocal terms do not generate persistent breathing or pinning-induced oscillations that would invalidate the time-independence assumption; the manuscript does not appear to contain such an invariance proof or counter-example scan.

    Authors: The central result follows from direct integration of the governing equations along the entire space-time trajectory under the rigid-object ansatz; this global integration yields the exact velocity-shape relation by construction. To address the concern explicitly, the revised manuscript will include a short supplementary analysis and parameter scan demonstrating that, for the nonreciprocal couplings considered, the front profile exhibits no persistent breathing or pinning oscillations beyond transient transients that decay within a few lattice spacings. revision: yes

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

No circularity identified; derivation self-contained against external benchmarks

full rationale

The provided abstract and context describe a velocity-shape relation derived by treating fronts as rigid objects over their full trajectory in discrete nonreciprocal systems. No equations, self-citations, fitted parameters, or ansatzes are quoted that reduce the claimed exact expression to its inputs by construction. The central step (rigid-object treatment yielding the relation) is presented as a new insight agreeing with numerics and literature approximations, without evidence of self-definition, renaming, or load-bearing self-citation. Per hard rules, absence of quotable reductions requires score 0; the paper is treated as self-contained.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

0 free parameters · 0 axioms · 0 invented entities

Abstract supplies no information on free parameters, axioms, or invented entities.

pith-pipeline@v0.9.0 · 5667 in / 925 out tokens · 20131 ms · 2026-05-23T17:40:50.182910+00:00 · methodology

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Reference graph

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