From two-dimensional continuous maps to one-dimensional discontinuous maps: a novel reduction explaining complex bifurcation structures in piecewise-linear families of maps
D. J. W. Simpson, V. Avrutin

TL;DR
This paper introduces a reduction from complex two-dimensional piecewise-linear maps near certain bifurcations to a family of one-dimensional discontinuous maps, revealing intricate bifurcation structures and dynamics.
Contribution
It presents a novel reduction method that approximates 2D maps with 1D discontinuous maps, elucidating complex bifurcation structures in piecewise-linear families.
Findings
One-dimensional maps exhibit period-incrementing and bandcount-incrementing.
Structures in 1D maps correspond closely to those in 2D maps.
The reduction clarifies the dynamics of the border-collision normal form.
Abstract
Piecewise-linear maps describe dynamical phenomena that switch between distinct states and readily generate complex bifurcation structures due to their strong nonlinearity. We show that two-dimensional continuous piecewise-linear maps near certain codimension-two homoclinic bifurcations are well approximated by a three-parameter family of one-dimensional maps. Each member of the one-dimensional family is discontinuous, because the family is constructed from the first return of iterates to a subset of phase space, and comprised of infinitely many linear pieces, where each piece corresponds to a fixed number of iterations near the saddle associated with the homoclinic bifurcation. The one-dimensional family exhibits period-incrementing, period-adding, bandcount-incrementing, and bandcount-adding structures (all typical for two-piece maps), as well as unique features caused by orbits…
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Taxonomy
TopicsChaos control and synchronization · Nonlinear Dynamics and Pattern Formation · Quantum chaos and dynamical systems
