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2005 | Buch

Dynamics Beyond Uniform Hyperbolicity

A Global Geometric and Probabilistic Perspective

verfasst von: Christian Bonatti, Lorenzo J. Díaz, Marcelo Viana

Verlag: Springer Berlin Heidelberg

Buchreihe : Encyclopaedia of Mathematical Sciences

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Über dieses Buch

What is Dynamics about? In broad terms, the goal of Dynamics is to describe the long term evolution of systems for which an "infinitesimal" evolution rule is known. Examples and applications arise from all branches of science and technology, like physics, chemistry, economics, ecology, communications, biology, computer science, or meteorology, to mention just a few. These systems have in common the fact that each possible state may be described by a finite (or infinite) number of observable quantities, like position, velocity, temperature, concentration, population density, and the like. Thus, m the space of states (phase space) is a subset M of an Euclidean space M . Usually, there are some constraints between these quantities: for instance, for ideal gases pressure times volume must be proportional to temperature. Then the space M is often a manifold, an n-dimensional surface for some n < m. For continuous time systems, the evolution rule may be a differential eq- tion: to each state x G M one associates the speed and direction in which the system is going to evolve from that state. This corresponds to a vector field X(x) in the phase space. Assuming the vector field is sufficiently regular, for instance continuously differentiable, there exists a unique curve tangent to X at every point and passing through x: we call it the orbit of x.

Metadaten
Titel
Dynamics Beyond Uniform Hyperbolicity
verfasst von
Christian Bonatti
Lorenzo J. Díaz
Marcelo Viana
Copyright-Jahr
2005
Verlag
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Electronic ISBN
978-3-540-26844-4
Print ISBN
978-3-540-22066-4
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/b138174