Geometry of the ergodic quotient reveals coherent structures in flows
Marko Budi\v{s}i\'c, Igor Mezi\'c

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel method using trajectory averages and the ergodic quotient to identify and analyze coherent structures in complex dynamical systems, validated on fluid flows and extending traditional analysis tools.
Contribution
The paper presents a new approach that constructs and parametrizes the ergodic quotient to reveal invariant sets and coherent structures across multiple scales in dynamical systems.
Findings
Successfully identified invariant sets in flow systems
Discovered new coherent structures in Hill's vortex flow
Extended Poincaré map analysis to complex flows
Abstract
Dynamical systems that exhibit diverse behaviors can rarely be completely understood using a single approach. However, by identifying coherent structures in their state spaces, i.e., regions of uniform and simpler behavior, we could hope to study each of the structures separately and then form the understanding of the system as a whole. The method we present in this paper uses trajectory averages of scalar functions on the state space to: (a) identify invariant sets in the state space, (b) form coherent structures by aggregating invariant sets that are similar across multiple spatial scales. First, we construct the ergodic quotient, the object obtained by mapping trajectories to the space of trajectory averages of a function basis on the state space. Second, we endow the ergodic quotient with a metric structure that successfully captures how similar the invariant sets are in the state…
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