Assist. Prof. Dr. Hesham Khalaf | Mathematics
| Best Researcher Award
Department of mathematics, Faculty of Science, Assiut University | Egypt
Assist. Prof. Dr. Hesham Khalaf dynamical systems research encompasses the analytical and numerical investigation of chaotic, hyperchaotic, fractional-order, and distributed-order models, with emphasis on understanding system behavior across different dimensions. Core contributions include examining symmetry properties, identifying equilibrium points, and performing stability, multistability, and bifurcation analyses to reveal transitions between periodic, chaotic, and hyperchaotic states. Advanced synchronization techniques—such as modulus-modulus, N-tuple compound, dual combination, and distributed-order synchronization—are applied to explore how distinct nonlinear systems interact, converge, or desynchronize under various coupling schemes. These synchronization strategies support practical applications in secure communications, image encryption, neural networks, circuit implementation, and control systems. Additional work investigates fractional-order derivatives and distributed-order operators, which capture memory effects and enhance the modeling of real-world processes. Research includes proposing new high-dimensional fractional-order hyperchaotic systems, studying their dynamic features, and applying them to grayscale and color image encryption. Numerical simulation methods, MATLAB-based modeling, and system dynamics tools are used to validate analytical results and visualize attractor structures. Further studies explore dynamical behaviors of classical models such as the Lorenz system, detuned laser models, and complex-valued chaotic systems, contributing to the advancement of applied mathematics, complex systems analysis, and modern chaos theory.
Profile: Orcid
Featured Publication
Khalaf, H., Mahmoud, G. M., Bountis, T., & AboElkher, A. M. (2025). A distributed-order fractional hyperchaotic detuned laser model: Dynamics, multistability, and dual combination synchronization. Fractal and Fractional, 9(10), Article 668. https://doi.org/10.3390/fractalfract9100668