Cauchy's convergence test: Difference between revisions

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Greetings. The writer's name is Phebe and she feels comfortable when people use the full title. Her family lives in Minnesota. Hiring is her working day job now and she will not change it anytime quickly. One of the things she enjoys most is to do aerobics and now she is trying to make money with it.<br><br>my website ... home std test kit ([http://www.shipzula.com/blogs/post/16377 linked website])
{{redirects|Mode lock||Mode-locking}}
{{redirects|Mode lock||Inharmonicity#Mode-locking}}
{{no footnotes|date=June 2013}}
[[Image:Circle map poincare recurrence.jpeg|thumb|upright|Circle map showing mode-locked regions or Arnold tongues in black. &Omega; varies from 0 to 1 along the ''x''-axis, and ''K'' varies from 0 at the bottom to 4&pi; at the top.]]
[[Image:Arnold tongues.png|thumb|right|400px|Some of the Arnold tongues for the standard circle map, <math>\varepsilon=\frac{K}{2\pi}</math>]]
[[Image:Devils-staircase.svg|thumb|right|[[Rotation number]] as a function of &Omega; with ''K'' held constant at ''K''&nbsp;=&nbsp;1]]
[[Image:Circle map winding number.jpeg|thumb|right|Rotation number, with black corresponding to 0, green to 1/2 and red to 1. &Omega; varies from 0 to 1 along the ''x''-axis, and ''K'' varies from 0 at the bottom to 2&pi; at the top.]]
[[Image:Circle map bifurcation.jpeg|thumb|upright|[[Bifurcation diagram]] for &Omega; held fixed at 1/3, and ''K'' running from 0 at bottom to 4&pi; at top. Black regions correspond to Arnold tongues.]]
In [[mathematics]], particularly in [[dynamical systems|dynamical systems theory]], an '''Arnold tongue''' of a finite-parameter family of circle maps, named after [[Vladimir Arnold]], is a region in the space of parameters where the map has locally-constant [[rational number|rational]] [[rotation number]]. In other words, it is a [[level set]] of a rotation number with nonempty interior.
 
==Standard circle map ==
Arnold tongues were first investigated for a family of dynamical systems on the circle first defined by [[Andrey Kolmogorov]]. Kolmogorov proposed this family as a simplified model for driven mechanical rotors (specifically, a free-spinning wheel weakly coupled by a spring to a motor). These circle map equations also describe a simplified model of the [[phase-locked loop]] in [[electronics]]. The map exhibits certain regions of its parameters where it is locked to the driving frequency (phase-locking or mode-locking in the language of electronic circuits). Among other applications, the circle map has been used to study the dynamical behaviour of a beating [[heart]].
 
The circle map is given by iterating the map
:<math>\theta_{n+1}=\theta_n + \Omega -\frac{K}{2\pi} \sin (2\pi \theta_n).</math>
where <math>\theta</math> is to be interpreted as polar angle such that its value lies between 0 and 1.
 
It has two parameters, the coupling strength ''K'' and the driving phase Ω. As a model for phase-locked loops, Ω may be interpreted as a driving frequency.  For ''K'' = 0 and Ω irrational, the map reduces to an [[irrational rotation]].
 
==Mode locking==
For small to intermediate values of ''K'' (that is, in the range of ''K'' = 0 to about ''K'' = 1), and certain values of Ω, the map exhibits a phenomenon called '''mode locking''' or '''phase locking'''.  In a phase-locked region, the values <math>\theta_n</math> advance essentially as a [[rational number|rational multiple]] of ''n'', although they may do so chaotically on the small scale.
 
The limiting behavior in the mode-locked regions is given by the [[rotation number]]
 
:<math>\omega=\lim_{n\to\infty}\frac{\sum_{1}^{n}\theta_n}{n}.</math>
 
which is also sometimes referred to as the map [[winding number]].
 
The phase-locked regions, or Arnold tongues, are illustrated in yellow in the figure above. Each such V-shaped region touches down to a rational value <math>\Omega=p/q</math> in the limit of <math>K\to 0</math>. The values of (''K'',Ω) in one of these regions will all result in a motion such that the rotation number <math>\omega=p/q</math>. For example, all values of (''K'',Ω) in the large ''V''-shaped region in the bottom-center of the figure correspond to a rotation number of <math>\omega=1/2</math>. One reason the term "locking" is used is that the individual values <math>\theta_n</math> can be perturbed by rather large random disturbances (up to the width of the tongue, for a given value of ''K''), without disturbing the limiting rotation number. That is, the sequence stays "locked on" to the signal, despite the addition of significant noise to the series <math>\theta_n</math>. This ability to "lock on" in the presence of noise is central to the utility of the phase-locked loop electronic circuit.
 
There is  a mode-locked region for every rational number <math>p/q</math>.  It is sometimes said that the circle map maps the rationals, a set of [[measure zero]] at ''K'' = 0, to a set of non-zero measure for <math>K\neq 0</math>. The largest tongues, ordered by size, occur at the [[Farey fraction]]s. Fixing ''K'' and taking a cross-section through this image, so that ω is plotted as a function of Ω gives the "Devil's staircase", a shape that is generically similar to the [[Cantor function]].
 
The circle map also exhibits [[Sarkovskii's theorem|subharmonic routes]] to chaos, that is, period doubling of the form 3,6,12,24,....
 
==Chirikov standard map==
The [[Chirikov standard map]] is related to the circle map, having similar recurrence relations, which may be written as
:<math>\theta_{n+1} = \theta_{n} + p_{n} + {\frac K {2\pi}} \sin(2\pi\theta_{n})</math>
:<math>p_{n+1} = \theta_{n+1} - \theta_{n}</math>
with both iterates taken modulo 1. In essence, the standard map introduces a momentum <math>p_{n}</math> which is allowed to dynamically vary, rather than being forced fixed, as it is in the circle map. The standard map is studied in [[physics]] by means of the [[kicked rotor]] [[Hamiltonian mechanics|Hamiltonian]].
 
==References==
* {{mathworld|urlname=CircleMap|title=Circle Map}}
*Philip L. Boyland : [http://projecteuclid.org/euclid.cmp/1104115779 Bifurcations of circle maps: Arnol'd tongues, bistability and rotation intervals] Comm. Math. Phys. Volume 106, Number 3 (1986), 353-381.
* Robert Gilmore and Marc Lefranc, ''The Topology of Chaos, Alice in Stretch and Squeezeland'', (2002) Wiley Interscience ISBN 0-471-40816-6 ''(Provides a brief review of basic facts in section 2.12)''.
* [[Leon Glass]], Michael R. Guevara, Alvin Shrier, Rafael Perez, "[http://www.cnd.mcgill.ca/bios/glass/pub_pdf/bifurcationandchaos_1983.pdf Bifurcation and Chaos in a Periodically Stimulated Cardiac Oscillator]", ''Physica'' '''7D''' (1983) pp 89–101. Bound as ''Order in Chaos, Proceedings of the International Conference on Order and Chaos held at the Center for Nonlinear Studies, Los Alamos, New Mexico 87545,USA 24–28 May 1982'', Eds. David Campbell, Harvey Rose; North-Holland Amsterdam ISBN 0-444-86727-9. ''(Performs a detailed analysis of [[heart]] cardiac rhythms in the context of the circle map.)''
* Mark McGuinness and Young Hong, [http://scitation.aip.org/getpdf/servlet/GetPDFServlet?filetype=pdf&id=CHAOEH000014000001000001000001&idtype=cvips Arnold tongues in human cardiorespiratory system], ''Chaos'', March 2004, 14, 1.
 
==External links==
*[http://www.ibiblio.org/e-notes/Chaos/circle.htm Circle map] with interactive Java applet
 
{{Chaos theory}}
 
{{DEFAULTSORT:Arnold Tongue}}
[[Category:Chaotic maps]]

Latest revision as of 16:27, 26 November 2014

Greetings. The writer's name is Phebe and she feels comfortable when people use the full title. Her family lives in Minnesota. Hiring is her working day job now and she will not change it anytime quickly. One of the things she enjoys most is to do aerobics and now she is trying to make money with it.

my website ... home std test kit (linked website)