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Basins of Attraction

Basins of Attraction . Dr. David Chan NCSSM TCM Conference February 1, 2002. Outline. Definitions and a Simple Example Newton’s Method in the Real Plane Newton’s Method in the Complex Plane The Biology of a Species. Dynamical Systems.

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Basins of Attraction

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  1. Basins of Attraction Dr. David Chan NCSSM TCM Conference February 1, 2002

  2. Outline • Definitions and a Simple Example • Newton’s Method in the Real Plane • Newton’s Method in the Complex Plane • The Biology of a Species

  3. Dynamical Systems A Dynamical System is a set of equations which model some changing phenomena. They often take the form of • Difference Equation(s) • Ordinary Differential Equation(s) • Partial Differential Equation(s)

  4. Examples: • Precalculus - Population growth - Drug Dosage - Loans

  5. More Examples: • Calculus -Function Iteration -Fixed points -Bifurcations -Periodic Orbits -Newton’s Method

  6. Attractors An attractor is a point or a collection of points on which the system can limit. These often take the form of -Fixed Points -Periodic Orbits -Strange Attractors

  7. Basins of Attraction The Basin of Attraction for an attractor is the set of points which limit on the attractor.

  8. Example: Function iteration Two fixed points x=0 Has a basin of attraction of (-1,1). x=1 Has a basin of attraction of {-1,1}. Everything else goes to infinity!

  9. Calculus—Newton’s Method • Used to find roots of a function by using tangent lines. • Formula:

  10. Location of a horizontal tangent line.

  11. Consider: Questions: • What is the basin of attraction for 0? • Are there other attractors other than the roots? • In what way(s) can Newton’s Method fail?

  12. Question: • What is the basin of attraction for 0? • Answer: • There is a part of each ‘hump’ of sine which will give 0 as a root.

  13. Question: • Are there other attractors other than the roots? • Answer: • There are periodic points.

  14. Question: • In what way(s) can Newton’s Method fail? • Answer: • Move to the next hump at the same location.

  15. Newton’s Method in the Complex Plane • Same method but involves using • complex arithmetic. • This is 2-dimensional. • has n different solutions. • And…

  16. Z2 - 1

  17. Z3 - 1

  18. Z4 - 1

  19. Z5 - 1

  20. Z2 - 1

  21. Z2.001 - 1

  22. Z2.005 - 1

  23. Z2.01 - 1

  24. Z2.02 - 1

  25. Z2.03 - 1

  26. Z2.04 - 1

  27. Z2.06 - 1

  28. Z2.1 - 1

  29. Z2.2 - 1

  30. Z2.3 - 1

  31. Z2.4 - 1

  32. Z2.5 - 1

  33. Z2.6 - 1

  34. Z2.7 - 1

  35. Z2.8 - 1

  36. Z2.9 - 1

  37. Z2.95 - 1

  38. Z3 - 1

  39. 1 x 1

  40. 0.1 x 0.1

  41. 0.01 x 0.01

  42. 0.000001 x 0.000001

  43. Newton’s Method: • Method fails at z=0. • Method fails at lots of points which • map to zero (eventually). • All these points have points of all • three colors near them.

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