Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byArabella Parsons Modified over 9 years ago
1
Introduction to Chaos Clint Sprott Department of Physics University of Wisconsin - Madison Presented to Physics 311 at University of Wisconsin in Madison, WI on October 31, 2014
2
Abbreviated History n Kepler (1605) n Newton (1687) n Poincare (1890) n Lorenz (1963)
3
Kepler (1605) n Tycho Brahe n 3 laws of planetary motion n Elliptical orbits
4
Newton (1687) n Invented calculus n Derived 3 laws of motion F = ma n Proposed law of gravity 1 F = Gm 1 m 2 /r 2 n Explained Kepler’s laws n Got headaches (3 body problem)
5
Poincare (1890) n 200 years later! n King Oscar (Sweden, 1887) n Prize won – 200 pages n No analytic solution exists! n Sensitive dependence on initial conditions (Lyapunov exponent) n Chaos! (Li & Yorke, 1975)
6
3-Body Problem
7
Chaos n Sensitive dependence on initial conditions (positive Lyapunov exp) n Aperiodic (never repeats) n Topologically mixing n Dense periodic orbits
8
Simple Pendulum F = ma -mg sin x = md 2 x/dt 2 dx/dt = v dv/dt = -g sin x dv/dt = -x (for g = 1, x << 1) Dynamical system Flow in 2-D phase space
9
Phase Space Plot for Pendulum
10
Features of Pendulum Flow n Stable (O) & unstable (X) equilibria n Linear and nonlinear regions n Conservative / time-reversible n Trajectories cannot intersect
11
Pendulum with Friction dx/dt = v dv/dt = -sin x – bv
12
Features of Pendulum Flow n Dissipative (cf: conservative) n Attractors (cf: repellors) n Poincare-Bendixson theorem n No chaos in 2-D autonomous system
13
Damped Driven Pendulum dx/dt = v dv/dt = -sin x – bv + sin t 2-D 3-D nonautonomousautonomous dx/dt = v dv/dt = -sin x – bv + sin z dz/dt =
14
New Features in 3-D Flows n More complicated trajectories n Limit cycles (2-D attractors) n Strange attractors (fractals) n Chaos!
15
Stretching and Folding
16
Chaotic Circuit
17
Equations for Chaotic Circuit dx/dt = y dy/dt = z dz/dt = az – by + c(sgn x – x) Jerk system Period doubling route to chaos
18
Bifurcation Diagram for Chaotic Circuit
19
Invitation I sometimes work on publishable research with bright undergraduates who are crack computer programmers with an interest in chaos. If interested, contact me.
20
References n http://sprott.physics.wisc.edu/ lectures/phys311.pptx (this talk) http://sprott.physics.wisc.edu/ lectures/phys311.pptx n http://sprott.physics.wisc.edu/chaost sa/ (my chaos textbook) http://sprott.physics.wisc.edu/chaost sa/ n sprott@physics.wisc.edu (contact me) sprott@physics.wisc.edu
21
Props n Hard copy of slides n Driven chaotic pendulum n Ball point pen n Silly putty n Chaotic circuit / speaker
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.