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Questionnaire Name Email Math courses taken so far General academic trend (major) General interests What about Chaos interests you the most? What computing experience do you have?
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Website www.cse.ucsc.edu/classes/ams146/Spring05/index.html
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Chapter 1 A global overview of nonlinear dynamical systems and chaos
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I.1 Definitions Dynamical system –A system of one or more variables which evolve in time according to a given rule –Two types of dynamical systems: Differential equations: time is continuous Difference equations (iterated maps): time is discrete
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I.1 Definitions Linear vs. nonlinear –A linear dynamical system is one in which the rule governing the time-evolution of the system involves a linear combination of all the variables. EXAMPLE: –A nonlinear dynamical system is simply… …not linear
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I.1 Definitions Chaos: Poincaré: (1880) “ It so happens that small differences in the initial state of the system can lead to very large differences in its final state. A small error in the former could then produce an enormous one in the latter. Prediction becomes impossible, and the system appears to behave randomly.”
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I.1 Definitions Chaos: Poincaré: (1880) “ It so happens that small differences in the initial state of the system can lead to very large differences in its final state. A small error in the former could then produce an enormous one in the latter. Prediction becomes impossible, and the system appears to behave randomly.”
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I.1 Definitions THE ESSENCE OF CHAOS! a dynamical system entirely determined by its initial conditions (deterministic) but which evolution cannot be predicted in the long-term
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I.2 Examples of chaotic systems the solar system (Poincare) the weather (Lorenz) turbulence in fluids (Libchaber) solar activity (Parker) population growth (May) lots and lots of other systems…
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I.2 Examples of chaotic systems the solar system (Poincare)
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I.2 Examples of chaotic systems the solar system (Poincare)
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I.2 Examples of chaotic systems the weather (Lorenz) Difficulties in predicting the weather are not related to the complexity of the Earths’ climate but to CHAOS in the climate equations!
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I.2 Examples of chaotic systems the weather (Lorenz)
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I.2 Examples of chaotic systems turbulence in fluids
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I.2 Examples of chaotic systems turbulence in fluids (Libchaber) convection in liquid helium.
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I.2 Examples of chaotic systems turbulence in fluids (similar experiment)
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I.2 Examples of chaotic systems turbulence in fluids (similar experiment)
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I.2 Examples of chaotic systems turbulence in fluids - period doubling to chaos
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I.2 Examples of chaotic systems solar activity
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I.2 Examples of chaotic systems solar activity
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I.2 Examples of chaotic systems solar activity
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I.2 Examples of chaotic systems solar activity
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I.2 Examples of chaotic systems solar activity
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I.2 Examples of chaotic systems solar activity
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I.2 Examples of chaotic systems population growth (May) –discrete, apparently simple dynamical systems can exhibit a rich array of behaviour –examples in nature are ubiquitous (population dynamics, epidemic propagation, …) –discretization corresponds to breeding cycle, seasonal recurrence, … –EXAMPLE: the logistic equation
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Mathematical detour: cobweb diagrams for 1D maps
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I.2 Examples of chaotic systems Logistic equation r = 2 r = 3.3
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I.2 Examples of chaotic systems Logistic equation r = 3.5r = 3.9
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I.2 Examples of chaotic systems Logistic equation
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I.3 Fractals Fractals appear everywhere in the study of dynamical systems Characteristics: –a fractal is a geometric object which can be divided into parts, each of which is similar to the original object. –they possess infinite detail, and are generally self- similar (independent of scale) –they can often be constructed by repeating a simple process (a map, for instance) ad infinitum. –they have a non-integer dimension!
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I.3 Fractals A section through the Lorenz dynamical system yields a fractal somewhat like the Cantor set an infinity of points, yet none are connected!
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I.3 Fractals Bifurcation diagrams are also fractal
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I.3 Fractals Bifurcation diagrams are also fractal
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I.3 Fractals Also appear in nature.. What is the length of a coastline? (Mandelbrot)
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I.3 Fractals Fractals naturally appear in iterated maps. –EXAMPLE: the Koch curve
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I.3 Fractals Appear to be the fate of most 2D iterated maps –Example: The Mandelbrot set is built from the quadratic map where z n and c are complex numbers.
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I.3 Fractals
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