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Isolating neighborhood

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

In the theory of dynamical systems, an isolating neighborhood is a compact set in the phase space of an invertible dynamical system with the property that any orbit contained entirely in the set belongs to its interior. This is a basic notion in the Conley index theory. Its variant for non-invertible systems is used in formulating a precise mathematical definition of an attractor.

Definition

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Conley index theory

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Let X be the phase space of an invertible discrete or continuous dynamical system with evolution operator

A compact subset N is called an isolating neighborhood if

where Int N is the interior of N. The set Inv(N,F) consists of all points whose trajectory remains in N for all positive and negative times. A set S is an isolated (or locally maximal) invariant set if S = Inv(NF) for some isolating neighborhood N.

Milnor's definition of attractor

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Let

be a (non-invertible) discrete dynamical system. A compact invariant set A is called isolated, with (forward) isolating neighborhood N if A is the intersection of forward images of N and moreover, A is contained in the interior of N:

It is not assumed that the set N is either invariant or open.

See also

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References

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  • Konstantin Mischaikow, Marian Mrozek, Conley index. Chapter 9 in Handbook of Dynamical Systems, vol 2, pp 393–460, Elsevier 2002 ISBN 978-0-444-50168-4
  • John Milnor (ed.). "Attractor". Scholarpedia.
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