Chaotic Maps, Hamiltonian Flows, and Holographic Methods
Abstract
Holographic functional methods are introduced as probes of discrete time-stepped maps that lead to chaotic behavior. The methods provide continuous time interpolation between the time steps, thereby revealing the maps to be quasi-Hamiltonian systems underlain by novel potentials that govern the motion of a perceived point particle. Between turning points, the particle is strictly driven by Hamiltonian dynamics, but at each encounter with a turning point the potential changes abruptly, loosely analogous to the switchbacks on a mountain road. A sequence of successively deepening switchback potentials explains, in physical terms, the frequency cascade and trajectory folding that occur on the particular route to chaos revealed by the logistic map.
Cite
@article{arxiv.1002.0104,
title = {Chaotic Maps, Hamiltonian Flows, and Holographic Methods},
author = {Thomas L. Curtright and Cosmas K. Zachos},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1002.0104},
year = {2010}
}
Comments
This paper, and its precedent arXiv:0909.2424 [math-ph], are dedicated to Murray Gell-Mann on the occasion of his 80th birthday