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Dynamical system
In engineering and mathematics, a dynamical system is a deterministic process in which a function's value changes over time according to a rule that is defined in terms of the function's current value.
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Types of dynamical systems
A dynamical system is called discrete if time is measured in discrete steps; these are modeled as recursive relations, as in the logistic map:
where t denotes the discrete time steps and x is the variable that changes with time. If time is measured continuously, the resulting continuous dynamical systems are expressed as ordinary differential equations, for instance
where x is the variable that changes with time t.
The changing variable x is often a real number but can also be a vector in Rk.
Linear and nonlinear systems
We distinguish between linear dynamical systems and nonlinear dynamical systems. In linear systems, the right-hand side of the equation is an expression that depends linearly on x, as in
If two solutions to a linear system are given, then their sum is also a solution ("superposition principle"). In general, the solutions form a vector space, which allows the use of linear algebra and simplifies the analysis significantly. For linear continuous systems, the Laplace transform method can also be used to transform the differential equation into an algebraic equation.
The two examples given earlier are nonlinear systems. These are much harder to analyze and often exhibit a phenomenon known as chaos, which appears to exhibit complete unpredictability; see also nonlinearity.
Dynamical systems and chaos theory
Simple nonlinear dynamical systems and even piecewise linear systems can exhibit a completely unpredictable behavior, which might seem to be random. (Remember that we are speaking of completely deterministic systems!). This unpredictable behaviour has been called chaos. The branch of dynamical systems that deals with the clean definition and investigation of chaos is called chaos theory.
This branch of mathematics deals with the long-term qualitative behavior of dynamical systems. Here, the focus is not on finding precise solutions to the equations defining the dynamical system (which is often hopeless), but rather to answer questions like "Will the system settle down to a steady state in the long term, and if so, what are the possible steady states?" or "Does the long-term behavior of the system depend on its initial condition?"
An important goal is to describe the fixed points, or steady states, of a given dynamical system; these are values of the variable that do not change over time. Some of these fixed points are attractive, meaning that if the system starts out in a nearby state, it will converge toward the fixed point.
Similarly, one is interested in periodic points, states of the system that repeat themselves after several timesteps. Periodic points can also be attractive. Sarkovskii's theorem is an interesting statement about the number of periodic points of a one-dimensional discrete dynamical system.
Note that the chaotic behaviour of complicated systems is not the issue. Meteorology has been known for years to involve complicated - even chaotic - behaviour. Chaos theory has been so surprising because chaos can be found within almost trivial systems. The logistic map is only a second-degree polynomial; the horseshoe map is piecewise linear.
Examples of dynamical systems
- Mind as a Dynamical System: Implications for Autism describes a model of mind as an interest system in which interests compete for attention. Aroused interests lead to action, and action consumes the very interests that lead to action in the first place. Look here for the equations of the model, and look here for an interactive animation of the model.
- Logistic map
- Double pendulum
- Horseshoe map is an example of a chaotic piecewise linear map
See also
External links
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