BIFURCATION FROM HOMOCLINIC ORBITS TO A SADDLE-SADDLE POINT IN A BANACH SPACE

Author(s):  
J. MIGUEL BLÁZQUEZ ◽  
A. ELÍAS TUMA
1991 ◽  
Vol 226 ◽  
pp. 511-547 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. S. Allen ◽  
R. M. Samelson ◽  
P. A. Newberger

We demonstrate the existence of a chaotic invariant set of solutions of an idealized model for wind-forced quasi-geostrophic flow over a continental margin with variable topography. The model (originally formulated to investigate mean flow generation by topographic wave drag) has bottom topography that slopes linearly offshore and varies sinusoidally alongshore. The alongshore topographic scales are taken to be short compared to the cross-shelf scale, allowing Hart's (1979) quasi-two-dimensional approximation, and the governing equations reduce to a non-autonomous system of three coupled nonlinear ordinary differential equations. For weak (constant plus time-periodic) forcing and weak friction, we apply a recent extension (Wiggins & Holmes 1987) of the method of Melnikov (1963) to test for the existence of transverse homoclinic orbits in the model. The inviscid unforced equations have two constants of motion, corresponding to energy E and enstrophy M, and reduce to a one-degree-of-freedom Hamiltonian system which, for a range of values of the constant G = E − M, has a pair of homoclinic orbits to a hyperbolic saddle point. Weak forcing and friction cause slow variations in G, but for a range of parameter values one saddle point is shown to persist as a hyperbolic periodic orbit and Melnikov's method may be applied to study the perturbations of the associated homoclinic orbits. In the absence of time-periodic forcing, the hyperbolic periodic orbit reduces to the unstable fixed point that occurs with steady forcing and friction. The method yields analytical expressions for the parameter values for which sets of chaotic solutions exist for sufficiently weak time-dependent forcing and friction. The predictions of the perturbation analysis are verified numerically with computations of Poincaré sections for solutions in the stable and unstable manifolds of the hyperbolic periodic orbit and with computations of solutions for general initial-value problems. In the presence of constant positive wind stress τ0 (equatorward on eastern ocean boundaries), chaotic solutions exist when the ratio of the oscillatory wind stress τ1 to the bottom friction parameter r is above a critical value that depends on τ0/r and the bottom topographic height. The analysis complements a previous study of this model (Samelson & Allen 1987), in which chaotic solutions were observed numerically for weak near-resonant forcing and weak friction.


Symmetry ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (11) ◽  
pp. 2148
Author(s):  
Kin Keung Lai ◽  
Mohd Hassan ◽  
Jitendra Kumar Maurya ◽  
Sanjeev Kumar Singh ◽  
Shashi Kant Mishra

In this paper, we consider convex multiobjective optimization problems with equality and inequality constraints in real Banach space. We establish saddle point necessary and sufficient Pareto optimality conditions for considered problems under some constraint qualifications. These results are motivated by the symmetric results obtained in the recent article by Cobos Sánchez et al. in 2021 on Pareto optimality for multiobjective optimization problems of continuous linear operators. The discussions in this paper are also related to second order symmetric duality for nonlinear multiobjective mixed integer programs for arbitrary cones due to Mishra and Wang in 2005. Further, we establish Karush–Kuhn–Tucker optimality conditions using saddle point optimality conditions for the differentiable cases and present some examples to illustrate our results. The study in this article can also be seen and extended as symmetric results of necessary and sufficient optimality conditions for vector equilibrium problems on Hadamard manifolds by Ruiz-Garzón et al. in 2019.


2011 ◽  
Vol 2011 ◽  
pp. 1-11
Author(s):  
Qiuju Xing ◽  
Yuming Shi

This paper is concerned with distribution of maps with transversal homoclinic orbits in a continuous map space, which consists of continuous maps defined in a closed and bounded set of a Banach space. By the transversal homoclinic theorem, it is shown that the map space contains a dense set of maps that have transversal homoclinic orbits and are chaotic in the sense of both Li-Yorke and Devaney with positive topological entropy.


2015 ◽  
Vol 2015 ◽  
pp. 1-8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xuhua Cheng ◽  
Zhikun She

It has been proved that, in the classical planar circular restricted three-body problem, the degenerate saddle point processes transverse homoclinic orbits. Since the standard Smale-Birkhoff theorem cannot be directly applied to indicate the chaotic dynamics of the Smale horseshoe type, we in this note alternatively apply the Conley-Moser conditions to analytically prove the existence of a Smale horseshoe in this classical restricted three-body problem.


2003 ◽  
Vol 16 (2) ◽  
pp. 273-283
Author(s):  
Ilham Djellit ◽  
Mohamed Ferchichi

Our study concerns global bifurcations occurring in noninvertible maps, it consists to show that there exists a link between contact bifurcations of a chaotic attractor and homoclinic bifurcations of a saddle point or a saddle cycle being on the boundary of the chaotic attractor. We provide specific information about the intricate dynamics near such points. We study particularly a two-dimensional endomorphism of (Z\ - Z$ - Z\) type. We will show that points of contact, between boundary of the attractor and its basin of attraction, converge toward the saddle point or the saddle cycle. These points of contact are also points of intersection between the stable and unstable invariant manifolds. This gives rise to the birth of homoclinic orbits (homoclinic bifurcations).


1993 ◽  
Vol 03 (02) ◽  
pp. 613-626 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. M. BLÁZQUEZ ◽  
E. TUMA

In this paper we present generalized theorems of the Shil'nikov type for evolution equations in Banach spaces of infinite dimension, which describe the behaviour of subsystems of solutions in a neighborhood of a double homoclinic orbits to the same saddle-focus point.


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