5,840 research outputs found
Stickiness in mushroom billiards
We investigate dynamical properties of chaotic trajectories in mushroom
billiards. These billiards present a well-defined simple border between a
single regular region and a single chaotic component. We find that the
stickiness of chaotic trajectories near the border of the regular region occurs
through an infinite number of marginally unstable periodic orbits. These orbits
have zero measure, thus not affecting the ergodicity of the chaotic region.
Notwithstanding, they govern the main dynamical properties of the system. In
particular, we show that the marginally unstable periodic orbits explain the
periodicity and the power-law behavior with exponent observed in the
distribution of recurrence times.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figures (corrected version with a new figure
Chaotic Explosions
We investigate chaotic dynamical systems for which the intensity of
trajectories might grow unlimited in time. We show that (i) the intensity grows
exponentially in time and is distributed spatially according to a fractal
measure with an information dimension smaller than that of the phase space,(ii)
such exploding cases can be described by an operator formalism similar to the
one applied to chaotic systems with absorption (decaying intensities), but
(iii) the invariant quantities characterizing explosion and absorption are
typically not directly related to each other, e.g., the decay rate and fractal
dimensions of absorbing maps typically differ from the ones computed in the
corresponding inverse (exploding) maps. We illustrate our general results
through numerical simulation in the cardioid billiard mimicking a lasing
optical cavity, and through analytical calculations in the baker map.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figure
Max Planck Virtual Library (VLib) - Two Years of Life Experience
The poster gives an overview how the VLib project has developed during the last two years, regarding project history, structure, organization, usage statistics, important facts, development issues and problems which have not been solved up to now
Characterizing Weak Chaos using Time Series of Lyapunov Exponents
We investigate chaos in mixed-phase-space Hamiltonian systems using time
series of the finite- time Lyapunov exponents. The methodology we propose uses
the number of Lyapunov exponents close to zero to define regimes of ordered
(stickiness), semi-ordered (or semi-chaotic), and strongly chaotic motion. The
dynamics is then investigated looking at the consecutive time spent in each
regime, the transition between different regimes, and the regions in the
phase-space associated to them. Applying our methodology to a chain of coupled
standard maps we obtain: (i) that it allows for an improved numerical
characterization of stickiness in high-dimensional Hamiltonian systems, when
compared to the previous analyses based on the distribution of recurrence
times; (ii) that the transition probabilities between different regimes are
determined by the phase-space volume associated to the corresponding regions;
(iii) the dependence of the Lyapunov exponents with the coupling strength.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figure
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