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A combinatorial method is developed in this book to explore the
mysteries of chaos, which has became a topic of science since 1975.
Using tools from theoretical computer science, formal languages and
automata, the complexity of symbolic behaviors of dynamical systems
is classified and analysed thoroughly. This book is mainly devoted
to explanation of this method and apply it to one-dimensional
dynamical systems, including the circle and interval maps, which
are typical in exhibiting complex behavior through simple iterated
calculations. The knowledge for reading it is self-contained in the
book.
This book is a monograph on chaos in dissipative systems written
for those working in the physical sciences. Emphasis is on symbolic
description of the dynamics and various characteristics of the
attractors, and written from the view-point of practical
applications without going into formal mathematical rigour. The
author used elementary mathematics and calculus, and relied on
physical intuition whenever possible. Substantial attention is paid
to numerical techniques in the study of chaos. Part of the book is
based on the publications of Chinese researchers, including those
of the author's collaborators.
This book is a monograph on chaos in dissipative systems written
for those working in the physical sciences. Emphasis is on symbolic
description of the dynamics and various characteristics of the
attractors, and written from the view-point of practical
applications without going into formal mathematical rigour. The
author used elementary mathematics and calculus, and relied on
physical intuition whenever possible. Substantial attention is paid
to numerical techniques in the study of chaos. Part of the book is
based on the publications of Chinese researchers, including those
of the author's collaborators.
Symbolic dynamics is a coarse-grained description of dynamics. It
has been a long-studied chapter of the mathematical theory of
dynamical systems, but its abstract formulation has kept many
practitioners of physical sciences and engineering from
appreciating its simplicity, beauty, and power. At the same time,
symbolic dynamics provides almost the only rigorous way to
understand global systematics of periodic and, especially, chaotic
motion in dynamical systems. In a sense, everyone who enters the
field of chaotic dynamics should begin with the study of symbolic
dynamics. However, this has not been an easy task for
non-mathematicians. On one hand, the method of symbolic dynamics
has been developed to such an extent that it may well become a
practical tool in studying chaotic dynamics, both on computers and
in laboratories. On the other hand, most of the existing literature
on symbolic dynamics is mathematics-oriented. This book is an
attempt at partially filling up this apparent gap by emphasizing
the applied aspects of symbolic dynamics without mathematical
rigor.
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