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Cantor and Sierpinski, Julia and Fatou; Crazy Topology in Complex Dynamics
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Cantor and Sierpinski, Julia and Fatou; Crazy Topology in Complex Dynamics Theorem:
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Cantor and Sierpinski, Julia and Fatou; Crazy Topology in Complex Dynamics Theorem: Planar topologists are crazy!
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Cantor and Sierpinski, Julia and Fatou; Crazy Topology in Complex Dynamics Theorem: Planar topologists are crazy! Proof: Should be clear by the end.....
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Three examples: Cantor bouquets Indecomposable continua Sierpinski curves
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Three examples: Cantor bouquets Indecomposable continua Sierpinski curves These arise as Julia sets for:
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Example 1: Cantor Bouquets
with Clara Bodelon Michael Hayes Gareth Roberts Ranjit Bhattacharjee Lee DeVille Monica Moreno Rocha Kreso Josic Alex Frumosu Eileen Lee
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Orbit of z: Question: What is the fate of orbits?
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Julia set of J = closure of {orbits that escape to } = closure {repelling periodic orbits} = {chaotic set} Fatou set = complement of J = predictable set
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Example 1: is a “Cantor bouquet”
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Example 1: is a “Cantor bouquet”
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Example 1: is a “Cantor bouquet” attracting fixed point q
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Example 1: is a “Cantor bouquet” q p repelling fixed point
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Example 1: is a “Cantor bouquet” q x0 p
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So where is J?
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So where is J?
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So where is J? Green points lie in the Fatou set
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So where is J? Green points lie in the Fatou set
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So where is J? Green points lie in the Fatou set
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So where is J? Green points lie in the Fatou set
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So where is J? Green points lie in the Fatou set
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The Julia set is a collection of curves (hairs) in the right half plane, each with an endpoint
and a stem. hairs endpoints stems
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A “Cantor bouquet” q p
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Colored points escape to and so are in the Julia set.
q p
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One such hair lies on the real axis.
repelling fixed point stem
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Orbits of points on the stems all tend to .
hairs
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So bounded orbits lie in the set of endpoints.
hairs
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So bounded orbits lie in the set of endpoints.
Repelling cycles lie in the set of endpoints. hairs
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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.
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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.
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S Some Facts:
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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
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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...
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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)
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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...
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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)
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Example 2: Indecomposable Continua
with Nuria Fagella Xavier Jarque Monica Moreno Rocha
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When , undergoes a saddle node bifurcation, but much more happens...
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As increases through 1/e, explodes.
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(Sullivan, Goldberg, Keen)
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As increases through , ; however:
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As increases through , ; however: No new periodic cycles are born;
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As increases through , ; however: No new periodic cycles are born; All move continuously to fill in the plane;
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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.”
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An indecomposable continuum is a compact, connected
set that cannot be broken into the union of two (proper) compact, connected subsets. For example:
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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
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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)
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An indecomposable continuum is a compact, connected
set that cannot be broken into the union of two (proper) compact, connected subsets. For example: indecomposable?
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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.
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An indecomposable continuum is a compact, connected
set that cannot be broken into the union of two (proper) compact, connected subsets. For example: indecomposable?
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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.
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Start with the Cantor middle-thirds set
Knaster continuum A well known example of an indecomposable continuum Start with the Cantor middle-thirds set
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Knaster continuum Connect symmetric points about 1/2 with semicircles
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Knaster continuum Do the same below about 5/6
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Knaster continuum And continue....
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Knaster continuum
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Properties of K: There is one curve that passes through all the
endpoints of the Cantor set.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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....
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Indecomposable! Try to write K as the union of two compact, connected sets.
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Indecomposable! Can’t divide it this way.... subsets are closed but not connected.
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Indecomposable! Or this way... again closed but not connected.
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Indecomposable! Or the union of the outer curve and all the inaccessible curves ... not closed.
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How the hairs become indecomposable:
repelling fixed pt . . . . ... . . . . . attracting fixed pt stem
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How the hairs become indecomposable:
. . . . ... . . . . . . . . . 2 repelling fixed points . . . . . . . . Now all points in R escape, so the hair is much longer . . . .
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But the hair is even longer!
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But the hair is even longer!
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But the hair is even longer! And longer.
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But the hair is even longer! And longer...
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But the hair is even longer! And longer.......
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But the hair is even longer! And longer.............
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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.
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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
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A pair of Cantor bouquets
Julia set of sin(z)
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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)
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sin(z)
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sin(z)
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sin(z)
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(1+.2i) sin(z)
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(1+ ci) sin(z)
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Questions: Do the hairs become indecomposable continua as in the exponential case? If so, what is the topology of these sets?
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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
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Sierpinski Curve A Sierpinski curve is any planar
set that is homeomorphic to the Sierpinski carpet fractal. The Sierpinski Carpet
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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
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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....
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The topologist’s sine curve
can be embedded inside
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The topologist’s sine curve
can be embedded inside
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The topologist’s sine curve
can be embedded inside
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The Knaster continuum can be embedded inside
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The Knaster continuum can be embedded inside
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The Knaster continuum can be embedded inside
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The Knaster continuum can be embedded inside
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The Knaster continuum can be embedded inside
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The Knaster continuum can be embedded inside
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The Knaster continuum can be embedded inside
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The Knaster continuum can be embedded inside
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The Knaster continuum can be embedded inside
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The Knaster continuum can be embedded inside
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The Knaster continuum can be embedded inside
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The Knaster continuum can be embedded inside
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The Knaster continuum can be embedded inside
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The Knaster continuum can be embedded inside
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The Knaster continuum can be embedded inside
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The Knaster continuum can be embedded inside
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The Knaster continuum can be embedded inside
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The Knaster continuum can be embedded inside
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The Knaster continuum can be embedded inside
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The Knaster continuum can be embedded inside
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The Knaster continuum can be embedded inside
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The Knaster continuum can be embedded inside
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The Knaster continuum can be embedded inside
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The Knaster continuum can be embedded inside
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The Knaster continuum can be embedded inside
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The Knaster continuum can be embedded inside
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The Knaster continuum can be embedded inside
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The Knaster continuum can be embedded inside
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The Knaster continuum can be embedded inside
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The Knaster continuum can be embedded inside
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The Knaster continuum can be embedded inside
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The Knaster continuum can be embedded inside
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The Knaster continuum can be embedded inside
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The Knaster continuum can be embedded inside
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Even this “curve” can be embedded inside
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Some easy to verify facts:
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Some easy to verify facts:
Have an immediate basin of infinity B
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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)
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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
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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)
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When , the Julia set is the unit circle
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When , the Julia set is the unit circle But when , the Julia set explodes A Sierpinski curve
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B T When , the Julia set is the unit circle But when , the
Julia set explodes B T A Sierpinski curve
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When , the Julia set is the unit circle But when , the Julia set explodes Another Sierpinski curve
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Also a Sierpinski curve
When , the Julia set is the unit circle But when , the Julia set explodes Also a Sierpinski curve
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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Lots of ways this happens:
parameter plane when n = 3
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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
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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
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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
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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
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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,
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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
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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.
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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
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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
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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
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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.
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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
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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
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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
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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
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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
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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
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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.
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Corollary:
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Corollary: Yes, those planar topologists are crazy, but I sure wish I were one of them!
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Corollary: Yes, those planar topologists are crazy, but I sure wish I were one of them! The End!
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website: math.bu.edu/DYSYS
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