Analysis of Observed Chaotic Data

Analysis of Observed Chaotic Data - Institute for Nonlinear Science

1st Edition 1996th 2nd printing 1997

Paperback (07 Nov 1997)

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Publisher's Synopsis

When I encountered the idea of chaotic behavior in deterministic dynami- cal systems, it gave me both great pause and great relief. The origin of the great relief was work I had done earlier on renormalization group properties of homogeneous, isotropic fluid turbulence. At the time I worked on that, it was customary to ascribe the apparently stochastic nature of turbulent flows to some kind of stochastic driving of the fluid at large scales. It was simply not imagined that with purely deterministic driving the fluid could be turbulent from its own chaotic motion. I recall a colleague remarking that there was something fundamentally unsettling about requiring a fluid to be driven stochastically to have even the semblance of complex motion in the velocity and pressure fields. I certainly agreed with him, but neither of us were able to provide any other reasonable suggestion for the observed, apparently stochastic motions of the turbulent fluid. So it was with relief that chaos in nonlinear systems, namely, complex evolution, indistinguish- able from stochastic motions using standard tools such as Fourier analysis, appeared in my bag of physics notions. It enabled me to have a physi- cally reasonable conceptual framework in which to expect deterministic, yet stochastic looking, motions. The great pause came from not knowing what to make of chaos in non- linear systems.

Book information

ISBN: 9780387983721
Publisher: Springer New York
Imprint: Springer
Pub date:
Edition: 1st Edition 1996th 2nd printing 1997
Language: English
Number of pages: 272
Weight: 581g
Height: 234mm
Width: 156mm
Spine width: 17mm