Questions tagged [dynamical-systems]

In dynamical systems, the motion of a particle in some geometric space, governed by some time dependent rules, is studied. The process can be discrete (where the particle jumps from point to point) or continuous (where the particle follows a trajectory). Dynamical systems is used in mathematical models of diverse fields such as classical mechanics, economics, traffic modelling, population dynamics, and biological feedback.

A dynamical system is, very broadly, a system which changes in time according to some rules. One concrete example of a dynamical system is the following.

Example 1: A billiard ball moving on a frictionless billiards table. In this example, what is changing in time is the position of the ball. There are two rules governing this motion, namely that the ball will travel at the same speed for all time, and that the ball will bank off a rail at the same angle that it hit the rail.

Given an initial position and velocity for the ball, these two rules enable one to compute the trajectory of the ball for all time. This illustrates an important property of dynamical systems: they are deterministic. The rules governing the dynamical system should, at least in theory, allow one to determine the state of the system at every point in the future, given some initial data. Another, more abstract, example of a dynamical system is

Example 2: A function $f\colon X\to X$, where $X$ is a set. In this example, one thinks of $X$ as a space in which a particle is moving, and $f$ as a rule governing the motion of the particle. Explicitly, if the particle is at the point $x_0\in X$ at time $t = 0$, then at time $t = 1$ it is at the point $x_1:= f(x_0)$, and at time $t = 2$ it is at the point $x_2 := f(x_1)$, etc.

Given the initial position $x_0$ of the particle, its position at time $t = n$ is therefore $f^{\circ n}(x_0)$, where $f^{\circ n}$ denotes the composition of $f$ with itself $n$ times. In this example, studying the dynamical system is equivalent to studying the iterates of $f$

Notice that in example 1 the position of the ball is defined for every time $t>0$, whereas in example 2 the position of the particle is only defined at positive integer values of time. Example 1 is called a continuous time dynamical system, and example 2 is called a discrete time dynamical system. These are the most commonly studied dynamical systems.

In both continuous and discrete time dynamical systems, the most commonly asked questions are the following:

  1. What is the trajectory of the system given specified initial conditions? While these trajectories can be computed in theory, in practice they are often difficult to impossible to compute.
  2. What is the long term behavior of the system? What happens after a long time, i.e., as $t\to\infty$?
  3. Are there any initial conditions which lead to "special" trajectories? For instance, in example 1, if the ball is hit from the center of the table along a line perpendicular to a rail, then its trajectory will be periodic, that is, it will repeat itself forever.

Continuous time dynamical systems

The most classical examples of dynamical systems are continuous time dynamical systems coming from physics. The motion of a particle moving in space under some force is a standard system; the rules governing the system in this situation are Newton's laws of motion. Another common systems are the diffusion of heat through a material, which is determined by the heat equation, or the motion of particles in a fluid, which is determined by a flow.

In each of these, as in most continuous time dynamical systems, the rules governing the system are a system of differential equations. Because of this, there is a great deal of overlap between the study dynamical systems and differential equations. Questions about the asymptotic behavior of solutions of differential equations very often fall under the heading of dynamical systems.

Discrete time dynamical systems

A discrete time dynamical system is given by a function $f\colon X\to X$, where $X$ is a set. In this generality, such a system is hard to study. Usually one imposes more structure:

  • If $X$ is a topological space and $f$ is continuous, it is called a topological dynamical system.
  • If $X$ is a manifold and $f$ is smooth, is it called a smooth dynamical system.
  • If $X$ is a complex manifold and $f$ is holomorphic, it is called a complex dynamical system.
  • If $X$ is a measure space and $f$ is measurable, it is called a measurable dynamical system.

Each of these types of dynamical systems has a rich theory behind it.

Chaos and ergodic theory

The most interesting dynamical systems are those that exhibit chaotic behavior. For instance, in example 1, suppose one hits the ball from the center of the table in a certain direction, and on another table one hits the ball from the center of the table in a slightly different direction. Then, after a long period of time, the trajectories of the two balls will diverge and be very different. Thus a slight change in initial conditions (direction the ball is hit) results in very different behavior of the two systems. Such extreme sensitivity to initial conditions is referred to as chaotic behavior.

Systems which exhibit chaotic behavior, while interesting, are often more difficult to study. A common method for approaching such systems is to use statistical and probabilistic methods. In example 1, for instance, instead of asking where the ball is at some very large time $t$ (which could be difficult to compute), one could ask where the ball is most likely to be at time $t$. Such questions are usually easier to approach, and fall under the heading of ergodic theory.

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Marginal stability and centers of nonlinear dynamical systems

If I have a coupled nonlinear dynamical system, like $$\dot{x}=ax-bxy$$ $$\dot{y}=cxy-dy$$ by using jacobian matrix, I can find that the point ($\frac {d}{c}$,$\frac {a}{b}$) is a center. I think in a nonlinear dynamical system, we cannot ensure…
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Homoclinic orbit Hamiltonian system

The question is for which $a \in \mathbb{R}$ the system: $x'' + x - x^3 + a = 0$, has a homoclinic orbit. I let $y = x'$ so the system becomes: $x' = y$ $y' = x^3 - x - a$ and determined the Hamiltonian as $H(x,y) = \frac{1}{2}(x^2 + y^2) -…
MrReese
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Attractive and repulsive fixed points

Consider the function $f(x) = ax(1-x)$. I have to show that if $ 1 < a < 3$ that the fixed point $p_2 = \dfrac{a-1}{a}$ is attractive, and if $ 3 < a < 4$ it is repulsive. I actually have no idea how to do this. I found that the top of the function…
iEvenLift
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Equivalence of two definitions of Lyapunov exponents

Yesterday I asked a question on eigenvalues of $A^{T}A$. Eigenvalues of $A^{T}A$ The reason why I asked this question was that I'd seen in articles two different definitions for Lyapunov exponents of a discrete dynamical system. Below I will give…
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Symbolic Dynamics - Prove Different Full Shifts are Not Conjugate

The full shift over an alphabet $A$ is the set of all bi-infinite sequences built from characters belonging to $A$. The full $n$-shift is the full shift over some alphabet of size $n$. The exercise I was asked to solve is to tell whether the…
co.sine
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Show that every orientation reversing homeomorphism of the real line has a fixed point.

A homeomorphism f is said to be orientation reversing if for any $x
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Hopf bifurcation

Consider the scalar linear retarded equation (with infinite delay) $$ x^{\prime}(t)=-ax(t)+b\int_{0}^{\infty}x(t-\tau)f(\tau)d\tau\;, $$ where $a,b\in\mathbb{R}$, $\tau\in\mathbb{R}^{+}$, and $f$ is an appropriate delay kernel. The book by Cushing…
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Continuous dynamical system bifurcation diagram help!$\dot{x} = x [r -(1 - x^2)] [r - (2x^3 - 2x)]$

So in dynamical system class, I ran into this equation. $\dot{x} = x [r -(1 - x^2)] [r - (2x^3 - 2x)]$ How can one possibly sketch the bifurcation diagram and locate and identify all bifurcations in this family? I know if I solve $0 = x [r -(1…
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Dynamical Systems course by Stefano Luzzatto.

I'm looking on youtube the fantastic course of Stefano Luzzatto called "Dynamical Systems". He always mention that some exercises are left as homework. Does anyone have those homework sets of questions? I would like to do his exercises because…
HeMan
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Two dynamical systems perpendicular

I am given two dynamical systems: $$x'=f(x)$$ $$x'=g(x)$$ where $f:\mathbb{R}^2\rightarrow \mathbb{R}^2$ and $g:\mathbb{R}^2\rightarrow \mathbb{R}^2$ are $C^1$ and perpendicular ($\langle f(x),g(x)\rangle=0$ for all $x's$). I am to show that if one…
Halinka
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Finding the Impulse Response Function for a state space model

I have converted the following ARMA model: $$y(t+3)-y(t+2)-y(t+1)+y(t)=u(t+1)+2u(t)$$ into the following state space model: $$x(t+1)=\begin{pmatrix}0 & 0 & -1\\ 1 & 0 & 1 \\ 0 & 1 & 1\\…
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Dynamical systems: Is there always an attractor?

I am just starting out with dynamical systems, and I am wondering if you can have a dynamical system with out any attractors (if so, can you give an example). Explanations or references backing up answers are appreciated.
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Proving that the tent map is topologically conjugate to the quadratic map

I'm having trouble proving that the tent map $$T_2 = 2x \ \text{for} \ 0\leq x\leq 1/2 \ \ \text{and} \ \ T_2(x) = 2(1-x) \ \text{for} \ 1/2\leq x\leq 1$$ is topologically conjugate to the quadratic map $$F_4(x) = 4x(1-x).$$ I know that to prove…
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When is the flow of this vector field on the torus periodic?

Let $\mathbb{T}^3$ be the three-dimensional flat torus. I wanna think of it as being $\mathbb{R}^3$ with each coordinate taken modulo $1$. Let $(x, y, z)$ be such coordinates, and let $\partial_x, \partial_y, \partial_z$ be the corresponding vector…
L..
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Why is symbolic dynamics dual to the 'normal' dynamics?

Normally, we have some usual space, say, $[0,1]$ or the circle. And define a map $f:X \to X$ which we then iterate and observe tons of properties (it could be mixing, sensitive, etc., a whole zoo of them). So different maps give us different…
Leo
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