ABSTRACT

Discovering Dynamical Systems Through Experiment and Inquiry differs from most texts on dynamical systems by blending the use of computer simulations with inquiry-based learning (IBL). IBL is an excellent tool to move students from merely remembering the material to deeper understanding and analysis. This method relies on asking students questions first, rather than presenting the material in a lecture.

Another unique feature of this book is the use of computer simulations. Students can discover examples and counterexamples through manipulations built into the software. These tools have long been used in the study of dynamical systems to visualize chaotic behavior.

We refer to this unique approach to teaching mathematics as ECAP—Explore, Conjecture, Apply, and Prove. ECAP was developed to mimic the actual practice of mathematics in an effort to provide students with a more holistic mathematical experience. In general, each section begins with exercises guiding students through explorations of the featured concept and concludes with exercises that help the students formally prove the results.

While symbolic dynamics is a standard topic in an undergraduate dynamics text, we have tried to emphasize it in a way that is more detailed and inclusive than is typically the case. Finally, we have chosen to include multiple sections on important ideas from analysis and topology independent from their application to dynamics.

chapter 1|10 pages

An Introduction to Dynamical Systems

chapter 2|22 pages

Sequences

chapter 3|20 pages

Fixed Points and Periodic Points

chapter 4|16 pages

Analysis of Fixed Points

chapter 5|12 pages

Bifurcations

chapter 6|12 pages

Examples of Global Dynamics

chapter 7|10 pages

The Tools of Global Dynamics

chapter 8|14 pages

Examples of Chaos

chapter 9|8 pages

From Fixed Points to Chaos

chapter 10|10 pages

Sarkovskii's Theorem

chapter 11|24 pages

Dynamical Systems on the Plane

chapter 12|10 pages

The Smale Horseshoe

chapter 13|24 pages

Generalized Symbolic Dynamics