ABSTRACT

There is an explosion of interest in dynamical systems in the mathematical community as well as in many areas of science. The results have been truly exciting: systems which once seemed completely intractable from an analytic point of view can now be understood in a geometric or qualitative sense rather easily.

Scientists and engineers realize the power and the beauty of the geometric and qualitative techniques. These techniques apply to a number of important nonlinear problems ranging from physics and chemistry to ecology and economics.

Computer graphics have allowed us to view the dynamical behavior geometrically. The appearance of incredibly beautiful and intricate objects such as the Mandelbrot set, the Julia set, and other fractals have really piqued interest in the field.

This is text is aimed primarily at advanced undergraduate and beginning graduate students.  Throughout, the author emphasizes the mathematical aspects of the theory of discrete dynamical systems, not the many and diverse applications of this theory.

The field of dynamical systems and especially the study of chaotic systems has been hailed as one of the important breakthroughs in science in the past century and its importance continues to expand. There is no question that the field is becoming more and more important in a variety of scientific disciplines.

New to this edition:

•Greatly expanded coverage complex dynamics now in Chapter 2
•The third chapter is now devoted to higher dimensional dynamical systems.
•Chapters 2 and 3 are independent of one another.
•New exercises have been added throughout.

part I|162 pages

One Dimensional Dynamics

chapter 21|16 pages

A Visual and Historical Tour

chapter 2|6 pages

Examples of Dynamical Systems

chapter 3|8 pages

Elementary Definitions

chapter 4|8 pages

Hyperbolicity

chapter 5|8 pages

An Example: The Logistic Family

chapter 6|4 pages

Symbolic Dynamics

chapter 7|8 pages

Topological Conjugacy

chapter 8|6 pages

Chaos

chapter 9|8 pages

Structural Stability

chapter 10|10 pages

Sharkovsky's Theorem

chapter 11|12 pages

The Schwarzian Derivative

chapter 12|14 pages

Bifurcations

chapter 13|10 pages

Another View of Period Three

chapter 14|14 pages

The Period-Doubling Route to Chaos

chapter 15|8 pages

Homoclinic Points and Bifurcations

chapter 16|12 pages

Maps of the Circle

chapter 17|8 pages

Morse-Smale Diffeomorphisms

part II|128 pages

Complex Dynamics

chapter 16418|8 pages

Quadratic Maps Revisited

chapter 19|4 pages

Normal Families and Exceptional Points

chapter 20|8 pages

Periodic Points

chapter 21|6 pages

Properties of the Julia Set

chapter 22|20 pages

The Geometry of the Julia Sets

chapter 23|12 pages

Neutral Periodic Points

chapter 24|30 pages

The Mandelbrot Set

chapter 25|22 pages

Rational Maps

chapter 26|16 pages

The Exponential Family

part III|94 pages

Higher Dimensional Dynamics

chapter 29227|10 pages

Dynamics of Linear Maps

chapter 28|10 pages

The Smale Horseshoe Map

chapter 29|12 pages

Hyperbolic Toral Automorphisms

chapter 30|14 pages

Attractors

chapter 31|18 pages

The Stable and Unstable Manifold Theorem

chapter 32|8 pages

Global Results and Hyperbolic Maps

chapter 33|12 pages

The Hopf Bifurcation

chapter 34|8 pages

The Hénon Map