Strange Attractors

Strange Attractors
Title Strange Attractors PDF eBook
Author William Sleator
Publisher
Total Pages 186
Release 1992-01
Genre Time travel
ISBN 9780749708795

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Strange Attractors

Strange Attractors
Title Strange Attractors PDF eBook
Author Julien C. Sprott
Publisher M & T Books
Total Pages 426
Release 1993
Genre Computers
ISBN 9781558512986

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Chaos and fractals are new mathematical ideas that have revolutionized our view of the world. They have application in virtually every academic discipline. This book shows examples of the artistic beauty that can arise from very simple equations, and teaches the reader how to produce an endless variety of such patterns. Disk includes a full working version of the program.

Strange Attractors

Strange Attractors
Title Strange Attractors PDF eBook
Author Sarah Glaz
Publisher CRC Press
Total Pages 266
Release 2008-10-27
Genre Mathematics
ISBN 1439865183

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Strange Attractors is a collection of approximately 150 poems with strong links to mathematics in content, form, or imagery. The common theme is love, and the editors draw from its various manifestations-romantic love, spiritual love, humorous love, love between parents and children, mathematicians in love, love of mathematics. The poets include li

Chaotic Evolution and Strange Attractors

Chaotic Evolution and Strange Attractors
Title Chaotic Evolution and Strange Attractors PDF eBook
Author David Ruelle
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Total Pages 114
Release 1989-09-07
Genre Mathematics
ISBN 9780521368308

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This book, based on lectures given at the Accademia dei Lincei, is an accessible and leisurely account of systems that display a chaotic time evolution. This behaviour, though deterministic, has features more characteristic of stochastic systems. The analysis here is based on a statistical technique known as time series analysis and so avoids complex mathematics, yet provides a good understanding of the fundamentals. Professor Ruelle is one of the world's authorities on chaos and dynamical systems and his account here will be welcomed by scientists in physics, engineering, biology, chemistry and economics who encounter nonlinear systems in their research.

Strange Attractors #5

Strange Attractors #5
Title Strange Attractors #5 PDF eBook
Author Charles Soule
Publisher Boom
Total Pages 34
Release 2016-10-05
Genre Comics & Graphic Novels
ISBN 1681599155

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Final issue! Brilliant mathematics student Heller Wilson finds his true calling when he starts connecting with his fellow New Yorkers in a daring attempt to save New York City from a series of catastrophic events.

Strange Attractors

Strange Attractors
Title Strange Attractors PDF eBook
Author Louis Armand
Publisher Salt Pub
Total Pages 118
Release 2003-01-01
Genre Poetry
ISBN 9781876857592

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An award-winning poet living in Prague, Armand presents a collection of his work that pursues the complex challenges language poses.

The Lorenz Equations

The Lorenz Equations
Title The Lorenz Equations PDF eBook
Author Colin Sparrow
Publisher Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages 280
Release 2012-12-06
Genre Science
ISBN 1461257670

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The equations which we are going to study in these notes were first presented in 1963 by E. N. Lorenz. They define a three-dimensional system of ordinary differential equations that depends on three real positive parameters. As we vary the parameters, we change the behaviour of the flow determined by the equations. For some parameter values, numerically computed solutions of the equations oscillate, apparently forever, in the pseudo-random way we now call "chaotic"; this is the main reason for the immense amount of interest generated by the equations in the eighteen years since Lorenz first presented them. In addition, there are some parameter values for which we see "preturbulence", a phenomenon in which trajectories oscillate chaotically for long periods of time before finally settling down to stable stationary or stable periodic behaviour, others in which we see "intermittent chaos", where trajectories alternate be tween chaotic and apparently stable periodic behaviours, and yet others in which we see "noisy periodicity", where trajectories appear chaotic though they stay very close to a non-stable periodic orbit. Though the Lorenz equations were not much studied in the years be tween 1963 and 1975, the number of man, woman, and computer hours spent on them in recent years - since they came to the general attention of mathematicians and other researchers - must be truly immense.