Dynamical system (definition)
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The dynamic system concept is a mathematical formalization for any fixed "rule" which describes the time dependence of a point's position in its ambient space. The concept unifies very different types of such "rules" in mathematics: the different choices made for how time is measured and the special properties of the ambient space may give an idea of the vastness of the class of objects described by this concept. Time can be measured by integers, by real or complex numbers or can be a more general algebraic object, losing the memory of its physical origin, and the ambient space may be simply a set, without the need of a smooth space-time structure defined on it.
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[edit] Formal definition
There are two classes of definitions for a dynamic system: one is motivated by ordinary differential equations and is geometrical in flavor; and the other is motivated by ergodic theory and is measure theoretical in flavor. The measure theoretical definitions assume the existence of a measure-preserving transformation. This appears to exclude dissipative systems, as in a dissipative system a small region of phase space shrinks under time evolution. A simple construction (sometimes called the Krylov-Bogolyubov theorem) shows that it is always possible to construct a measure so as to make the evolution rule of the dynamic system a measure-preserving transformation. In the construction a given measure of the state space is summed for all future points of a trajectory, assuring the invariance.
The difficulty in constructing the natural measure for a dynamic system makes it difficult to develop ergodic theory starting from differential equations, so it becomes convenient to have a dynamic systems-motivated definition within ergodic theory that side-steps the choice of measure.
[edit] General definition
In the most general sense, a dynamic system is a tuple (T, M, Φ) where T is a monoid, written additively, M is a set and Φ is a function
with


for 
The function Φ(t,x) is called the evolution function of the dynamic system: it associates to every point in the set M a unique image, depending on the variable t, called the evolution parameter. M is called phase space or state space, while the variable x represents an initial state of the system.
We often write
if we take one of the variables as constant.
is called flow through x and its graph trajectory through x. The set
is called orbit through x.
A subset S of the state space M is called Φ-invariant if for all x in S and all t in 
In particular, for S to be Φ-invariant, we require that
for all
in
. That is, the flow through x should be defined for all time for every element of
.
[edit] Geometrical cases
In these cases M is a manifold (or its extreme case a graph).
[edit] Real dynamic system
A real dynamic system, real-time dynamic system or flow is a tuple (T, M, Φ) with T an open interval in the real numbers R, M a manifold locally diffeomorphic to a Banach space, and Φ a continuous function. If T=R we call the system global, if T is restricted to the non-negative reals we call the system a semi-flow. If Φ is continuously differentiable we say the system is a differentiable dynamic system. If the manifold M is locally diffeomorphic to Rn the dynamic system is finite-dimensional and if not, the dynamic system is infinite-dimensional.
[edit] Discrete dynamic system
A discrete dynamic system, discrete-time dynamic system, map or cascade is a tuple (T, M, Φ) with T the integers, M a manifold locally diffeomorphic to a Banach space, and Φ a function. If T is restricted to the non-negative integers we call the system a semi-cascade.
[edit] Cellular automaton
A cellular automaton is a tuple (T, M, Φ), with T a lattice such as the integers or a higher dimensional integer grid, M a finite set, and Φ an evolution function. Some cellular automata are reversible dynamic systems, although most are not.
[edit] Measure theoretical definition
- See main article measure-preserving dynamic system.
A dynamic system may be defined formally, as a measure-preserving transformation of a sigma-algebra, the triplet
. Here, T is a monoid (usually the non-negative integers), X is a set, and Σ is a topology on X, so that
is a sigma-algebra. For every element
, μ is its finite measure, so that the triplet
is a probability space. A map
is said to be Σ-measurable if and only if, for every
, one has
. A map Φ is said to preserve the measure if and only if, for every
, one has
. Combining the above, a map Φ is said to be a measure-preserving transformation of X , if it is a map from X to itself, it is Σ-measurable, and is measure-preserving. The triplet
, for such a Φ, is then defined to be a dynamic system.
The map Φ embodies the time evolution of the dynamic system. Thus, for discrete dynamic systems the iterates
for every integer n are studied. For continuous dynamic systems, the map Φ is understood to be finite time evolution map and the construction is more complicated.
[edit] Relation to geometric definition
Many different invariant measures can be associated to any one evolution rule. In ergodic theory the choice is assumed made, but if the dynamic system is given by a system of differential equations the appropriate measure must be determined. Some systems have a natural measure, such as the Liouville measure in Hamiltonian systems, chosen over other invariant measures, such as the measures supported on periodic orbits of the Hamiltonian system. For many dissipative chaotic systems the choice of invariant measure is technically more challenging. The measure needs to be supported on the attractor, but attractors have zero Lebesgue measure and the invariant measures must be singular with respect to the Lebesgue measure.
For hyperbolic dynamic systems, the Sinai-Ruelle-Bowen measures appear to be the natural choice. They are constructed on the geometrical structure of stable and unstable manifolds of the dynamic system; they behave physically under small perturbations; and they explain many of the observed statistics of hyperbolic systems.
[edit] Construction of dynamic systems
The concept of evolution in time is central to the theory of dynamic systems as seen in the previous sections: the basic reason for this fact is that the starting motivation of the theory was the study of time behavior of classical mechanical systems, that is the study of the initial value problems for their describing systems of ordinary differential equations.
where
represents the velocity of the material point 
is a vector field in
or
and represents the change of velocity induced by the known forces acting on the given material point. Depending on the properties of this vector field, the mechanical system is called
-
- autonomous, when

- homogeneous when
for all 
- autonomous, when
The solution is the evolution function already introduced in above
Some formal manipulation of the system of differential equations shown above gives a more general form of equations a dynamical system must satisfy
where
is a functional from the set of evolution functions to the field of the complex numbers.
[edit] Compactification of a dynamical system
Given a global dynamical system (R, X, Φ) on a locally compact and Hausdorff topological space X, it is often useful to study the continuous extension Φ* of Φ to the one-point compactification X* of X. Although we lose the differential structure of the original system we can now use compactness arguments to analyze the new system (R, X*, Φ*).
In compact dynamical systems the limit set of any orbit is non-empty, compact and simply connected.
[edit] References
- Vladimir Igorevic Arnol'd "Ordinary differential equations", various editions from MIT Press and from Springer Verlag, chapter 1 "Fundamental concepts".
- I. D. Chueshov "Introduction to the Theory of Infinite-Dimensional Dissipative Systems" online version of first edition on the EMIS site [1].
- Roger Temam "Infinite-Dimensional Dynamical Systems in Mechanics and Physics" Springer Verlag 1988, 1997.



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