- Tent map
In
mathematics , the tent map is aniterated function , in the shape of atent , forming adiscrete-time dynamical system . It takes a point on thereal line and maps it to another point::
where μ is a positive real constant.
Behaviour
The tent map and the
logistic map aretopologically conjugate , and thus the behaviour of the two maps are in this sense identical under iteration.Depending on the value of μ, the tent map demonstrates a range of dynamical behaviour ranging from predictable to chaotic.
* If μ is less than 1 the point "x" = 0 is an attractive fixed point of the system for all initial values of "x" i.e. the system will converge towards "x" = 0 from any initial value of "x".
* If μ is 1 all values of "x" less than or equal to 1/2 are fixed points of the system.
* If μ is greater than 1 the system has two fixed points, one at 0, and the other at μ/(μ + 1). Both fixed points are unstable i.e. a value of "x" close to either fixed point will move away from it, rather than towards it. For example, when μ is 1.5 there is a fixed point at "x" = 0.6 (because 1.5(1 − 0.6) = 0.6) but starting at "x" = 0.61 we get
::
* If μ is between 1 and the square root of 2 the system maps a set of intervals between μ − μ2/2 and μ/2 to themselves. This set of intervals is the
Julia set of the map i.e. it is the smallest invariant sub-set of the real line under this map. If μ is greater than the square root of 2, these intervals merge, and the Julia set is the whole interval from μ − μ2/2 to μ/2 (see bifurcation diagram).* If μ is between 1 and 2 the interval [μ − μ2/2, μ/2] contains both periodic and non-periodic points, although all of the orbits are unstable (i.e. nearby points move away from the orbits rather than towards them). Orbits with longer lengths appear as μ increases. For example:
::
::
::
* If μ equals 2 the system maps the interval [0,1] to itself. There are now periodic points with every orbit length within this interval, as well as non-periodic points. The periodic points are dense in [0,1] , so the map has become chaotic.
* If μ is greater than 2 the map's Julia set becomes disconnected, and breaks up into a
Cantor set within the interval [0,1] . The Julia set still contains an infinite number of both non-periodic and periodic points (including orbits for any orbit length) but almost every point within [0,1] will now eventually diverge towards infinity. The canonicalCantor set (obtained by successively deleting middle thirds from subsets of the unit line) is the Julia set of the tent map for μ = 3.Magnifying the Orbit Diagram
* A closer look at the orbit diagram shows that there are 4 separated regions at μ ≈ 1. For further magnification, 2 reference lines (red) are drawn from the tip to suitable x at certain μ (e.g., 1.10) as shown.
* With distance measured from the corresponding reference lines, further detail appears in the upper and lower part of the map. (total 8 separated regions at some μ)
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