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Article
Geometry and Topology of Escape. I. Epistrophes
Chaos: An Interdiscipliary Journal of Nonlinear Science
  • K. A. Mitchell, William & Mary
  • J. P. Handley, William & Mary
  • B. Tighe, William & Mary
  • John B. Delos, William & Mary
  • Stephen Knudson
Document Type
Article
Department/Program
Physics
Pub Date
9-1-2003
Publisher
American Institute of Physics
Abstract

We consider a dynamical system given by an area-preserving map on a two-dimensional phase plane and consider a one-dimensional line of initial conditions within this plane. We record the number of iterates it takes a trajectory to escape from a bounded region of the plane as a function along the line of initial conditions, forming an “escape-time plot.” For a chaotic system, this plot is in general not a smooth function, but rather has many singularities at which the escape time is infinite; these singularities form a complicated fractal set. In this article we prove the existence of regular repeated sequences, called “epistrophes,” which occur at all levels of resolution within the escape-time plot. (The word “epistrophe” comes from rhetoric and means “a repeated ending following a variable beginning.”) The epistrophes give the escape-time plot a certain self-similarity, called “epistrophic” self-similarity, which need not imply either strict or asymptotic self-similarity.

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1063/1.1598311
Disciplines
Citation Information
K. A. Mitchell, J. P. Handley, B. Tighe, John B. Delos, et al.. "Geometry and Topology of Escape. I. Epistrophes" Chaos: An Interdiscipliary Journal of Nonlinear Science Vol. 13 Iss. 3 (2003) p. 880 - 891
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/john-delos/48/