Attractors and Attracting Neighborhoods for Multiflows
Shannon Negaard-Paper

TL;DR
This paper develops a topological framework using multiflows to analyze attractors and their neighborhoods in continuous time dynamical systems that lack uniqueness in forward evolution, extending existing discrete-time theories.
Contribution
It introduces multiflows as a new tool for studying attractors in non-unique continuous time systems, expanding the topological approach to this broader class of systems.
Findings
Established attractor / attracting neighborhood pairs in continuous systems
Extended Conley index concepts to non-unique continuous systems
Applied framework to Filippov systems and control theory
Abstract
We already know a great deal about dynamical systems with uniqueness in forward time. Indeed, flows, semiflows, and maps (both invertible and not) have been studied at length. A view that has proven particularly fruitful is topological: consider invariant sets (attractors, repellers, periodic orbits, etc.) as topological objects, and the connecting sets between them form gradient like flows. In the case of systems with uniqueness in forward time, an attractor in one system is related to nearby attractors in a family of other, "close enough" systems. One way of seeing that connection is through the Conley decomposition (and the Conley index) [2], [13]. This approach requires focusing on isolated invariant sets - that is, invariant sets with isolating neighborhoods. If there is an invariant set , which has an isolating neighborhood . This approach was expanded to…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Differential Equations and Dynamical Systems · Mathematical Dynamics and Fractals
