Period-doubling cascades galore
Abstract
The appearance of numerous period-doubling cascades is among the most prominent features of {\bf parametrized maps}, that is, smooth one-parameter families of maps , where is a smooth locally compact manifold without boundary, typically . Each cascade has infinitely many period-doubling bifurcations, and it is typical to observe -- such as in all the examples we investigate here -- that whenever there are any cascades, there are infinitely many cascades. We develop a general theory of cascades for generic . We illustrate this theory with several examples. We show that there is a close connection between the transition through infinitely many cascades and the creation of a horseshoe.
Cite
@article{arxiv.0903.3613,
title = {Period-doubling cascades galore},
author = {Evelyn Sander and James A. Yorke},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0903.3613},
year = {2009}
}
Comments
52 pages, 12 figures; extensively revised to make clearer what we have achieved. We have added applications to maps with horseshoes, described the new phenomenon of paired cascades, and related this to geometric versions of single- and double-well Duffing equations