Science Fair Project Encyclopedia
Quasiperiodic motion
Quasiperiodic motion, in mathematics and theoretical physics, is in rough terms the type of motion executed by a dynamical system containing two incommensurable frequencies.
That is, if we imagine that the phase space is modelled by a torus T, the trajectory of the system is modelled by a curve on T that wraps around without ever exactly coming back on itself.
A quasiperiodic function on the real line is the type of function (continuous, say) obtained from a function on T, by means of a curve
- R → T
which is linear (when lifted from T to its covering Euclidean space), by composition. It is therefore oscillating, with a finite number of underlying frequencies. (NB the sense in which theta functions and the Weierstrass zeta function in complex analysis are said to have quasi-periods with respect to a period lattice is something distinct from this.)
The theory of almost periodic functions is, roughly speaking, for the same situation but allowing T to be a torus with an infinite number of dimensions.
The contents of this article is licensed from www.wikipedia.org under the GNU Free Documentation License. Click here to see the transparent copy and copyright details


