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Systems with sub-processes evolving on many different time scales
are ubiquitous in applications: chemical reactions, electro-optical
and neuro-biological systems, to name just a few. This volume
contains papers that expose the state of the art in mathematical
techniques for analyzing such systems. Recently developed geometric
ideas are highlighted in this work that includes a theory of
relaxation-oscillation phenomena in higher dimensional phase
spaces. Subtle exponentially small effects result from singular
perturbations implicit in certain multiple time scale systems.
Their role in the slow motion of fronts, bifurcations, and jumping
between invariant tori are all explored here. Neurobiology has
played a particularly stimulating role in the development of these
techniques and one paper is directed specifically at applying
geometric singular perturbation theory to reveal the synchrony in
networks of neural oscillators.
Systems with sub-processes evolving on many different time scales
are ubiquitous in applications: chemical reactions, electro-optical
and neuro-biological systems, to name just a few. This volume
contains papers that expose the state of the art in mathematical
techniques for analyzing such systems. Recently developed geometric
ideas are highlighted in this work that includes a theory of
relaxation-oscillation phenomena in higher dimensional phase
spaces. Subtle exponentially small effects result from singular
perturbations implicit in certain multiple time scale systems.
Their role in the slow motion of fronts, bifurcations, and jumping
between invariant tori are all explored here. Neurobiology has
played a particularly stimulating role in the development of these
techniques and one paper is directed specifically at applying
geometric singular perturbation theory to reveal the synchrony in
networks of neural oscillators.
This volume contains the lecture notes written by the four
principal speakers at the C.I.M.E. session on Dynamical Systems
held at Montecatini, Italy in June 1994. The goal of the session
was to illustrate how methods of dynamical systems can be applied
to the study of ordinary and partial differential equations. Topics
in random differential equations, singular perturbations, the
Conley index theory, and non-linear PDEs were discussed. Readers
interested in asymptotic behavior of solutions of ODEs and PDEs and
familiar with basic notions of dynamical systems will wish to
consult this text.
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