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Cantor and Sierpinski, Julia and Fatou;

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1 Cantor and Sierpinski, Julia and Fatou; Crazy Topology in Complex Dynamics

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6 Cantor and Sierpinski, Julia and Fatou; Crazy Topology in Complex Dynamics Theorem:

7 Cantor and Sierpinski, Julia and Fatou; Crazy Topology in Complex Dynamics Theorem: Planar topologists are crazy!

8 Cantor and Sierpinski, Julia and Fatou; Crazy Topology in Complex Dynamics Theorem: Planar topologists are crazy! Proof: Should be clear by the end.....

9 Three examples: Cantor bouquets Indecomposable continua Sierpinski curves

10 Three examples: Cantor bouquets Indecomposable continua Sierpinski curves These arise as Julia sets for:

11 Example 1: Cantor Bouquets
with Clara Bodelon Michael Hayes Gareth Roberts Ranjit Bhattacharjee Lee DeVille Monica Moreno Rocha Kreso Josic Alex Frumosu Eileen Lee

12 Orbit of z: Question: What is the fate of orbits?

13 Julia set of J = closure of {orbits that escape to } = closure {repelling periodic orbits} = {chaotic set} Fatou set = complement of J = predictable set

14 Example 1: is a “Cantor bouquet”

15 Example 1: is a “Cantor bouquet”

16 Example 1: is a “Cantor bouquet” attracting fixed point q

17 Example 1: is a “Cantor bouquet” q p repelling fixed point

18 Example 1: is a “Cantor bouquet” q x0 p

19 So where is J?

20 So where is J?

21 So where is J? Green points lie in the Fatou set

22 So where is J? Green points lie in the Fatou set

23 So where is J? Green points lie in the Fatou set

24 So where is J? Green points lie in the Fatou set

25 So where is J? Green points lie in the Fatou set

26 The Julia set is a collection of curves (hairs) in the right half plane, each with an endpoint
and a stem. hairs endpoints stems

27 A “Cantor bouquet” q p

28 Colored points escape to and so are in the Julia set.
q p

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33 One such hair lies on the real axis.
repelling fixed point stem

34 Orbits of points on the stems all tend to .
hairs

35 So bounded orbits lie in the set of endpoints.
hairs

36 So bounded orbits lie in the set of endpoints.
Repelling cycles lie in the set of endpoints. hairs

37 So bounded orbits lie in the set of endpoints.
Repelling cycles lie in the set of endpoints. hairs So the endpoints are dense in the bouquet.

38 So bounded orbits lie in the set of endpoints.
Repelling cycles lie in the set of endpoints. hairs So the endpoints are dense in the bouquet.

39 S Some Facts:

40 The only accessible points in J from the Fatou set are the endpoints;
Some Facts: The only accessible points in J from the Fatou set are the endpoints; you cannot touch the stems

41 The only accessible points in J from the Fatou set are the endpoints;
Some Crazy Facts: The only accessible points in J from the Fatou set are the endpoints; you cannot touch the stems The set of endpoints is totally disconnected...

42 The only accessible points in J from the Fatou set are the endpoints;
Some Crazy Facts: The only accessible points in J from the Fatou set are the endpoints; you cannot touch the stems The set of endpoints is totally disconnected... but the endpoints together with the point at infinity is connected (Mayer)

43 The only accessible points in J from the Fatou set are the endpoints;
Some Crazy Facts: The only accessible points in J from the Fatou set are the endpoints; you cannot touch the stems The set of endpoints is totally disconnected... but the endpoints together with the point at infinity is connected (Mayer) Hausdorff dimension of {stems} = 1...

44 The only accessible points in J from the Fatou set are the endpoints;
Some Crazy Facts: The only accessible points in J from the Fatou set are the endpoints; you cannot touch the stems The set of endpoints is totally disconnected... but the endpoints together with the point at infinity is connected (Mayer) Hausdorff dimension of {stems} = 1... but the Hausdorff dimension of {endpoints} = 2! (Karpinska)

45 Example 2: Indecomposable Continua
with Nuria Fagella Xavier Jarque Monica Moreno Rocha

46 When , undergoes a saddle node bifurcation, but much more happens...

47 As increases through 1/e, explodes.

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272 (Sullivan, Goldberg, Keen)

273 As increases through , ; however:

274 As increases through , ; however: No new periodic cycles are born;

275 As increases through , ; however: No new periodic cycles are born; All move continuously to fill in the plane;

276 As increases through , ; however: No new periodic cycles are born; All move continuously to fill in the plane; Infinitely many hairs suddenly become “indecomposable continua.”

277 An indecomposable continuum is a compact, connected
set that cannot be broken into the union of two (proper) compact, connected subsets. For example:

278 An indecomposable continuum is a compact, connected
set that cannot be broken into the union of two (proper) compact, connected subsets. For example: indecomposable? 1

279 An indecomposable continuum is a compact, connected
set that cannot be broken into the union of two (proper) compact, connected subsets. For example: No, decomposable. 1 (subsets need not be disjoint)

280 An indecomposable continuum is a compact, connected
set that cannot be broken into the union of two (proper) compact, connected subsets. For example: indecomposable?

281 An indecomposable continuum is a compact, connected
set that cannot be broken into the union of two (proper) compact, connected subsets. For example: No, decomposable.

282 An indecomposable continuum is a compact, connected
set that cannot be broken into the union of two (proper) compact, connected subsets. For example: indecomposable?

283 An indecomposable continuum is a compact, connected
set that cannot be broken into the union of two (proper) compact, connected subsets. For example: No, decomposable.

284 Start with the Cantor middle-thirds set
Knaster continuum A well known example of an indecomposable continuum Start with the Cantor middle-thirds set

285 Knaster continuum Connect symmetric points about 1/2 with semicircles

286 Knaster continuum Do the same below about 5/6

287 Knaster continuum And continue....

288 Knaster continuum

289 Properties of K: There is one curve that passes through all the
endpoints of the Cantor set.

290 Properties of K: There is one curve that passes through all the
endpoints of the Cantor set. It accumulates everywhere on itself and on K.

291 Properties of K: There is one curve that passes through all the
endpoints of the Cantor set. It accumulates everywhere on itself and on K. And is the only piece of K that is accessible from the outside.

292 Properties of K: There is one curve that passes through all the
endpoints of the Cantor set. It accumulates everywhere on itself and on K. And is the only piece of K that is accessible from the outside. But there are infinitely many other curves in K, each of which is dense in K.

293 Properties of K: There is one curve that passes through all the
endpoints of the Cantor set. It accumulates everywhere on itself and on K. And is the only piece of K that is accessible from the outside. But there are infinitely many other curves in K, each of which is dense in K. So K is compact, connected, and....

294 Indecomposable! Try to write K as the union of two compact, connected sets.

295 Indecomposable! Can’t divide it this way.... subsets are closed but not connected.

296 Indecomposable! Or this way... again closed but not connected.

297 Indecomposable! Or the union of the outer curve and all the inaccessible curves ... not closed.

298 How the hairs become indecomposable:
repelling fixed pt . . . . ... . . . . . attracting fixed pt stem

299 How the hairs become indecomposable:
. . . . ... . . . . . . . . . 2 repelling fixed points . . . . . . . . Now all points in R escape, so the hair is much longer . . . .

300 But the hair is even longer!

301 But the hair is even longer!

302 But the hair is even longer! And longer.

303 But the hair is even longer! And longer...

304 But the hair is even longer! And longer.......

305 But the hair is even longer! And longer.............

306 Compactify to get a single curve in a compact region
in the plane that accumulates everywhere on itself. The closure is then an indecomposable continuum.

307 The dynamics on this continuum is very simple:
one repelling fixed point all other orbits either tend to or accumulate on the orbit of 0 and But the topology is not at all understood: Conjecture: the continuum for each parameter is topologically distinct. sin(z) Sierpinski

308 A pair of Cantor bouquets
Julia set of sin(z)

309 Julia set of sin(z) A pair of Cantor bouquets
Unlike the exponential bouquets (which have measure 0), these have infinite Lebesgue measure, though they are homeomorphic to the exponential bouquets. Julia set of sin(z)

310 sin(z)

311 sin(z)

312 sin(z)

313 (1+.2i) sin(z)

314 (1+ ci) sin(z)

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515 Questions: Do the hairs become indecomposable continua as in the exponential case? If so, what is the topology of these sets?

516 Example 3: Sierpinski Curves
with: Paul Blanchard Toni Garijo Matt Holzer U. Hoomiforgot Dan Look Sebastian Marotta Mark Morabito Monica Moreno Rocha Kevin Pilgrim Elizabeth Russell Yakov Shapiro David Uminsky

517 Sierpinski Curve A Sierpinski curve is any planar
set that is homeomorphic to the Sierpinski carpet fractal. The Sierpinski Carpet

518 Topological Characterization
Any planar set that is: 1. compact 2. connected 3. locally connected 4. nowhere dense 5. any two complementary domains are bounded by simple closed curves that are pairwise disjoint is a Sierpinski curve. The Sierpinski Carpet

519 A Sierpinski curve is a universal plane continuum:
More importantly.... A Sierpinski curve is a universal plane continuum: Any planar, one-dimensional, compact, connected set can be homeomorphically embedded in a Sierpinski curve. For example....

520 The topologist’s sine curve
can be embedded inside

521 The topologist’s sine curve
can be embedded inside

522 The topologist’s sine curve
can be embedded inside

523 The Knaster continuum can be embedded inside

524 The Knaster continuum can be embedded inside

525 The Knaster continuum can be embedded inside

526 The Knaster continuum can be embedded inside

527 The Knaster continuum can be embedded inside

528 The Knaster continuum can be embedded inside

529 The Knaster continuum can be embedded inside

530 The Knaster continuum can be embedded inside

531 The Knaster continuum can be embedded inside

532 The Knaster continuum can be embedded inside

533 The Knaster continuum can be embedded inside

534 The Knaster continuum can be embedded inside

535 The Knaster continuum can be embedded inside

536 The Knaster continuum can be embedded inside

537 The Knaster continuum can be embedded inside

538 The Knaster continuum can be embedded inside

539 The Knaster continuum can be embedded inside

540 The Knaster continuum can be embedded inside

541 The Knaster continuum can be embedded inside

542 The Knaster continuum can be embedded inside

543 The Knaster continuum can be embedded inside

544 The Knaster continuum can be embedded inside

545 The Knaster continuum can be embedded inside

546 The Knaster continuum can be embedded inside

547 The Knaster continuum can be embedded inside

548 The Knaster continuum can be embedded inside

549 The Knaster continuum can be embedded inside

550 The Knaster continuum can be embedded inside

551 The Knaster continuum can be embedded inside

552 The Knaster continuum can be embedded inside

553 The Knaster continuum can be embedded inside

554 The Knaster continuum can be embedded inside

555 The Knaster continuum can be embedded inside

556 The Knaster continuum can be embedded inside

557 Even this “curve” can be embedded inside

558 Some easy to verify facts:

559 Some easy to verify facts:
Have an immediate basin of infinity B

560 Some easy to verify facts:
Have an immediate basin of infinity B 0 is a pole so have a “trap door” T (the preimage of B)

561 Some easy to verify facts:
Have an immediate basin of infinity B 0 is a pole so have a “trap door” T (the preimage of B) 2n critical points given by but really only one critical orbit due to symmetry

562 Some easy to verify facts:
Have an immediate basin of infinity B 0 is a pole so have a “trap door” T (the preimage of B) 2n critical points given by but really only one critical orbit due to symmetry J is now the boundary of the escaping orbits (not the closure)

563 When , the Julia set is the unit circle

564 When , the Julia set is the unit circle But when , the Julia set explodes A Sierpinski curve

565 B T When , the Julia set is the unit circle But when , the
Julia set explodes B T A Sierpinski curve

566 When , the Julia set is the unit circle But when , the Julia set explodes Another Sierpinski curve

567 Also a Sierpinski curve
When , the Julia set is the unit circle But when , the Julia set explodes Also a Sierpinski curve

568 Sierpinski curves arise in lots of different ways in these families:
1. If the critical orbits eventually fall into the trap door (which is disjoint from B), then J is a Sierpinski curve.

569 Sierpinski curves arise in lots of different ways in these families:
1. If the critical orbits eventually fall into the trap door (which is disjoint from B), then J is a Sierpinski curve.

570 Sierpinski curves arise in lots of different ways in these families:
1. If the critical orbits eventually fall into the trap door (which is disjoint from B), then J is a Sierpinski curve.

571 Sierpinski curves arise in lots of different ways in these families:
1. If the critical orbits eventually fall into the trap door (which is disjoint from B), then J is a Sierpinski curve.

572 Sierpinski curves arise in lots of different ways in these families:
1. If the critical orbits eventually fall into the trap door (which is disjoint from B), then J is a Sierpinski curve.

573 Sierpinski curves arise in lots of different ways in these families:
1. If the critical orbits eventually fall into the trap door (which is disjoint from B), then J is a Sierpinski curve.

574 Sierpinski curves arise in lots of different ways in these families:
1. If the critical orbits eventually fall into the trap door (which is disjoint from B), then J is a Sierpinski curve.

575 Sierpinski curves arise in lots of different ways in these families:
1. If the critical orbits eventually fall into the trap door (which is disjoint from B), then J is a Sierpinski curve.

576 Sierpinski curves arise in lots of different ways in these families:
1. If the critical orbits eventually fall into the trap door (which is disjoint from B), then J is a Sierpinski curve.

577 Sierpinski curves arise in lots of different ways in these families:
1. If the critical orbits eventually fall into the trap door (which is disjoint from B), then J is a Sierpinski curve.

578 Sierpinski curves arise in lots of different ways in these families:
1. If the critical orbits eventually fall into the trap door (which is disjoint from B), then J is a Sierpinski curve.

579 Lots of ways this happens:
parameter plane when n = 3

580 lies in a Sierpinski hole
Lots of ways this happens: parameter plane when n = 3 J is a Sierpinski curve T lies in a Sierpinski hole

581 lies in a Sierpinski hole
Lots of ways this happens: parameter plane when n = 3 J is a Sierpinski curve T lies in a Sierpinski hole

582 lies in a Sierpinski hole
Lots of ways this happens: parameter plane when n = 3 J is a Sierpinski curve T lies in a Sierpinski hole

583 lies in a Sierpinski hole
Lots of ways this happens: parameter plane when n = 3 J is a Sierpinski curve T lies in a Sierpinski hole

584 n = 4, escape time 4, 24 Sierpinski holes,
Theorem: Two maps drawn from the same Sierpinski hole have the same dynamics, but those drawn from different holes are not conjugate (except in very few symmetric cases). n = 4, escape time 4, 24 Sierpinski holes,

585 Theorem: Two maps drawn from the same Sierpinski
hole have the same dynamics, but those drawn from different holes are not conjugate (except in very few symmetric cases). n = 4, escape time 4, 24 Sierpinski holes, but only five conjugacy classes

586 Theorem: Two maps drawn from the same Sierpinski
hole have the same dynamics, but those drawn from different holes are not conjugate (except in very few symmetric cases). n = 4, escape time 12: ,653,184 Sierpinski holes, but only 67,108,832 distinct conjugacy classes Sorry. I forgot to indicate their locations.

587 Sierpinski curves arise in lots of different ways in these families:
2. If the parameter lies in the main cardioid of a buried baby Mandelbrot set, J is again a Sierpinski curve. parameter plane when n = 4

588 Sierpinski curves arise in lots of different ways in these families:
2. If the parameter lies in the main cardioid of a buried baby Mandelbrot set, J is again a Sierpinski curve. parameter plane when n = 4

589 Sierpinski curves arise in lots of different ways in these families:
2. If the parameter lies in the main cardioid of a buried baby Mandelbrot set, J is again a Sierpinski curve. parameter plane when n = 4

590 Black regions are the basin
Sierpinski curves arise in lots of different ways in these families: 2. If the parameter lies in the main cardioid of a buried baby Mandelbrot set, J is again a Sierpinski curve. Black regions are the basin of an attracting cycle.

591 Sierpinski curves arise in lots of different ways in these families:
3. If the parameter lies at a buried point in the “Cantor necklaces” in the parameter plane, J is again a Sierpinski curve. parameter plane n = 4

592 Sierpinski curves arise in lots of different ways in these families:
3. If the parameter lies at a buried point in the “Cantor necklaces” in the parameter plane, J is again a Sierpinski curve. parameter plane n = 4

593 Sierpinski curves arise in lots of different ways in these families:
3. If the parameter lies at a buried point in the “Cantor necklaces” in the parameter plane, J is again a Sierpinski curve. parameter plane n = 4

594 Sierpinski curves arise in lots of different ways in these families:
4. There is a Cantor set of circles in the parameter plane on which each parameter corresponds to a Sierpinski curve. n = 3

595 Sierpinski curves arise in lots of different ways in these families:
4. There is a Cantor set of circles in the parameter plane on which each parameter corresponds to a Sierpinski curve. n = 3

596 Sierpinski curves arise in lots of different ways in these families:
4. There is a Cantor set of circles in the parameter plane on which each parameter corresponds to a Sierpinski curve. n = 3

597 Theorem: All these Julia sets are the same topologically, but they are all (except for symmetrically located parameters) VERY different from a dynamics point of view (i.e., the maps are not conjugate). Problem: Classify the dynamics on these Sierpinski curve Julia sets.

598 Corollary:

599 Corollary: Yes, those planar topologists are crazy, but I sure wish I were one of them!

600 Corollary: Yes, those planar topologists are crazy, but I sure wish I were one of them! The End!

601 website: math.bu.edu/DYSYS


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