SYMBOLIC DYNAMICS FROM HOMOCLINIC TANGLES
From MaRDI portal
Publication:4736361
DOI10.1142/S0218127402004565zbMath1044.37035OpenAlexW2076884346MaRDI QIDQ4736361
Publication date: 9 August 2004
Published in: International Journal of Bifurcation and Chaos (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1142/s0218127402004565
Topological entropy (37B40) Dynamical systems involving homeomorphisms and diffeomorphisms of planes and surfaces (37E30) Symbolic dynamics (37B10) Homoclinic and heteroclinic orbits for dynamical systems (37C29)
Related Items
HIGH-ORDER BISECTION METHOD FOR COMPUTING INVARIANT MANIFOLDS OF TWO-DIMENSIONAL MAPS ⋮ Using periodic orbits to compute chaotic transport rates between resonance zones ⋮ Partitioning two-dimensional mixed phase spaces ⋮ Using heteroclinic orbits to quantify topological entropy in fluid flows ⋮ Using Invariant Manifolds to Construct Symbolic Dynamics for Three-Dimensional Volume-Preserving Maps ⋮ The topology of nested homoclinic and heteroclinic tangles ⋮ Symbolic partition in chaotic maps ⋮ Topological dynamics of volume-preserving maps without an equatorial heteroclinic curve ⋮ Improved generalized cell mapping for global analysis of dynamical systems
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Nonlinear oscillations, dynamical systems, and bifurcations of vector fields
- Chaotic transport in dynamical systems
- An efficient method for computing invariant manifolds of planar maps
- Growing 1D and quasi-2D unstable manifolds of maps
- A fixed-point theorem for planar homeomorphisms
- Train-tracks for surface homeomorphisms
- On the computation of invariant manifolds of fixed points
- Lectures on Nielsen fixed point theory
- On the geometry and dynamics of diffeomorphisms of surfaces
- The Numerical Computation of Homoclinic Orbits for Maps
- CALCULATING STABLE AND UNSTABLE MANIFOLDS
- Topological fluid mechanics of stirring
- Outer Tangency Bifurcations of Chaotic Sets
- An Introduction to Symbolic Dynamics and Coding
- Homoclinic tangles-classification and applications
- Relative periodic point theory