Boolean delay equations. II: Periodic and aperiodic solutions (Q1092243): Difference between revisions
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English | Boolean delay equations. II: Periodic and aperiodic solutions |
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Boolean delay equations. II: Periodic and aperiodic solutions (English)
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1985
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[Part I, cf. SIAM J. Appl. Math. 44, 111-126 (1984; Zbl 0539.39001).] Boolean delay equations (BDEs) are evolution equations for a vector of discrete variables x(t). The value of each component \(x_ i(t)\), 0 or 1, depends on previous values of all components \(x_ j(t-t_{ij})\), \(x_ i(t)=f_ i(x_ 1(t-t_{i1}),...,x_ n(t-t_{in}))\). BDEs model the evolution of biological and physical systems with threshold behavior and nonlinear feedbacks. The delays model distinct interaction times between pairs of variables. In this paper, BDEs are studied by algebraic, analytic, and numerical methods. It is shown that solutions depend continuously on the initial data and on the delays. BDEs are classified into conservative and dissipative. All BDEs with only rational delays have only periodic solutions. But conservative BDEs with rationally unrelated delays have aperiodic solutions of increasing complexity. These solutions can be approximated arbitrarily well by periodic solutions of increasing period. Self-similarity and intermittency of aperiodic solutions is studied as a function of delay values, and certain number-theoretic questions related to resonances and diophantine approximation are raised. Period length is shown to be a lower semicontinuous function of the delays for a given BDE, and can be evaluated explicitly for linear equations. We prove that a BDE is structurable stable if and only if it has eventually periodic solutions of bounded period, and if the length of initial transients is bounded. It is shown that, for dissipative BDEs, asymptotic solution behavior is typically governed by a reduced BDE. Applications to climate dynamics and other problems are outlined.
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time-dependent
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