Integral manifolds, canards and black swans (Q5940166): Difference between revisions

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Latest revision as of 11:34, 30 July 2024

scientific article; zbMATH DE number 1624622
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Integral manifolds, canards and black swans
scientific article; zbMATH DE number 1624622

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    Integral manifolds, canards and black swans (English)
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    10 May 2002
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    Consider the singularly perturbed system of nonautonomous differential equations \[ dx/dt =f(x,y,t,\varepsilon), \quad \varepsilon dy/dt =2ty+a+g(x,y,t,a,\varepsilon), \tag \(*\) \] with \(x \in \mathbb{R}^n\), \(y \in \mathbb{R}\), \(0<\varepsilon \ll 1\). Assume that for \(\varepsilon =0\), \(a =0\), system \((*)\) has the invariant manifold \(y=0\). The authors derive conditions on \(f\) and \(g\) ensuring the existence of a function \(a(x,\varepsilon)\) such that \((*)\) has an integral manifold \({\mathcal{M}}_\varepsilon : = \{(x,y,t,\varepsilon)\in \mathbb{R}^{n+3}: y=h(x,t,\varepsilon)\}\) that is attracting for \(t<0\) and repelling for \(t>0\); moreover, \(a\) and \(h\) tend to zero as \(\varepsilon\) tends to zero. The authors call the integral manifold \({\mathcal{M}}_\varepsilon\) a black swan (higher-dimensional canard solution).
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    singularly perturbed system
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    integral manifold
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    higher dimensional canard
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