An Introduction to Dynamical Systems
Continuous and Discrete
R. Clark Robinson(Author)
American Mathematical Society (Publisher)
2nd Edition
Will be published approx. on 28. February 2012
Book
Paperback/Softback
733 pages
978-1-4704-8519-1 (ISBN)
Description
This book gives a mathematical treatment of the introduction to qualitative differential equations and discrete dynamical systems. The treatment includes theoretical proofs, methods of calculation, and applications. The two parts of the book, continuous time of differential equations and discrete time of dynamical systems, can be covered independently in one semester each or combined together into a year long course. The material on differential equations introduces the qualitative or geometric approach through a treatment of linear systems in any dimension. There follows chapters where equilibria are the most important feature, where scalar (energy) functions is the principal tool, where periodic orbits appear, and finally, chaotic systems of differential equations. The many different approaches are systematically introduced through examples and theorems. The material on discrete dynamical systems starts with maps of one variable and proceeds to systems in higher dimensions. The treatment starts with examples where the periodic points can be found explicitly and then introduces symbolic dynamics to analyze where they can be shown to exist but not given in explicit form. Chaotic systems are presented both mathematically and more computationally using Lyapunov exponents. With the one-dimensional maps as models, the multidimensional maps cover the same material in higher dimensions. This higher dimensional material is less computational and more conceptual and theoretical. The final chapter on fractals introduces various dimensions which is another computational tool for measuring the complexity of a system. It also treats iterated function systems which give examples of complicated sets. In the second edition of the book, much of the material has been rewritten to clarify the presentation. Also, some new material has been included in both parts of the book. This book can be used as a textbook for an advanced undergraduate course on ordinary differential equations and/or dynamical systems. Prerequisites are standard courses in calculus (single variable and multivariable), linear algebra, and introductory differential equations.
More details
Series
Edition
Second Edition
Language
English
Place of publication
Providence
United States
Target group
Professional and scholarly
ISBN-13
978-1-4704-8519-1 (9781470485191)
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Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Previous edition

Book
06/2016
American Mathematical Society
€126.28
Shipment within 10-20 days
Person
R. Clark Robinson, Northwestern University, Evanston, IL
Content
Cover;
Title page;
Contents;
Prefaces;
Historical prologue;
Part I.
Systems of nonlinear differential equations;
Geometric approach to differential equations;
Linear systems;
The flow: Solutions of nonlinear equations;
Phase portraits with emphasis on fixed points;
Phase portraits using Scalar functions;
Periodic orbits; Chaotic attractors;
Part II.
Iteration of functions;
Iteration of functions as dynamics;
Periodic points of one-dimensional maps;
Itineraries for one-dimensional maps;
Invariant sets for one-dimensional maps;
Periodic points of higher dimensional maps;
Invariant sets for higher dimensional maps;
Fractals; Background and terminology;
Generic properties;
Bibliography;
Index;
Back Cover
Title page;
Contents;
Prefaces;
Historical prologue;
Part I.
Systems of nonlinear differential equations;
Geometric approach to differential equations;
Linear systems;
The flow: Solutions of nonlinear equations;
Phase portraits with emphasis on fixed points;
Phase portraits using Scalar functions;
Periodic orbits; Chaotic attractors;
Part II.
Iteration of functions;
Iteration of functions as dynamics;
Periodic points of one-dimensional maps;
Itineraries for one-dimensional maps;
Invariant sets for one-dimensional maps;
Periodic points of higher dimensional maps;
Invariant sets for higher dimensional maps;
Fractals; Background and terminology;
Generic properties;
Bibliography;
Index;
Back Cover