ABSTRACT

A First Course in Chaotic Dynamical Systems: Theory and Experiment, Second Edition

The long-anticipated revision of this well-liked textbook offers many new additions. In the twenty-five years since the original version of this book was published, much has happened in dynamical systems. Mandelbrot and Julia sets were barely ten years old when the first edition appeared, and most of the research involving these objects then centered around iterations of quadratic functions.  This research has expanded to include all sorts of different types of functions, including higher-degree polynomials, rational maps, exponential and trigonometric functions, and many others.  Several new sections in this edition are devoted to these topics.

 

The area of dynamical systems covered in A First Course in Chaotic Dynamical Systems: Theory and Experiment, Second Edition is quite accessible to students and also offers a wide variety of interesting open questions for students at the undergraduate level to pursue. The only prerequisite for students is a one-year calculus course (no differential equations required); students will easily be exposed to many interesting areas of current research. This course can also serve as a bridge between the low-level, often non-rigorous calculus courses, and the more demanding higher-level mathematics courses.

Features

  • More extensive coverage of fractals, including objects like the Sierpinski carpet and others
    that appear as Julia sets in the later sections on complex dynamics, as well as an actual
    chaos "game."
  • More detailed coverage of complex dynamical systems like the quadratic family
    and the exponential maps.
  • New sections on other complex dynamical systems like rational maps.
  • A number of new and expanded computer experiments for students to perform.

About the Author

Robert L. Devaney is currently professor of mathematics at Boston University. He received his PhD from the University of California at Berkeley under the direction of Stephen Smale. He taught at Northwestern University and Tufts University before coming to Boston University in 1980. His main area of research is dynamical systems, primarily complex analytic dynamics, but also including more general ideas about chaotic dynamical systems. Lately, he has become intrigued with the incredibly rich topological aspects of dynamics, including such things as indecomposable continua, Sierpinski curves, and Cantor bouquets.

chapter 1|15 pages

A Visual and Historical Tour

chapter 2|7 pages

Examples of Dynamical Systems

chapter 3|12 pages

Orbits

chapter 4|7 pages

Graphical Analysis

chapter 5|16 pages

Fixed and Periodic Points

chapter 6|17 pages

Bifurcations

chapter 7|12 pages

The Quadratic Family

chapter 8|13 pages

Transition to Chaos

chapter 9|16 pages

Symbolic Dynamics

chapter 10|18 pages

Chaos

chapter 11|20 pages

Sharkovsky's Theorem

chapter 12|9 pages

Role of the Critical Point

chapter 13|11 pages

Newton's Method

chapter 14|30 pages

Fractals

chapter 15|17 pages

Complex Functions

chapter 16|22 pages

The Julia Set

chapter 17|29 pages

The Mandelbrot Set

chapter 18|23 pages

Other Complex Dynamical Systems