scholarly journals Some Properties of the $k$-bonacci Words on Infinite Alphabet

10.37236/9406 ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 27 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Narges Ghareghani ◽  
Morteza Mohammad-Noori ◽  
Pouyeh Sharifani

The Fibonacci word $W$ on an infinite alphabet was introduced in [Zhang et al., Electronic J. Combinatorics 2017 24(2), 2-52] as a fixed point of the morphism $2i\rightarrow (2i)(2i+1)$, $(2i+1) \rightarrow (2i+2)$, $i\geq 0$. Here, for any integer $k>2$, we define the infinite $k$-bonacci word $W^{(k)}$ on the infinite alphabet as $\varphi_k^{\omega}(0)$, where the morphism $\varphi_k$ on the alphabet $\mathbb{N}$ is defined for any $i\geq 0$ and any $0\leq j\leq k-1$, by \begin{equation*} \varphi_k(ki+j) = \left\{ \begin{array}{ll} (ki)(ki+j+1) & \text{if } j = 0,\cdots ,k-2,\\ (ki+j+1)& \text{otherwise}. \end{array} \right. \end{equation*} We consider the sequence of finite words $(W^{(k)}_n)_{n\geq 0}$, where  $W^{(k)}_n$ is the prefix of $W^{(k)}$ whose length is the $(n+k)$-th $k$-bonacci number. We then provide a recursive formula for the number of palindromes that occur in different positions of $W^{(k)}_n$. Finally, we obtain the structure of all palindromes occurring in $W^{(k)}$ and based on this, we compute the palindrome complexity of $W^{(k)}$, for any $k>2$.

1995 ◽  
Vol 15 (6) ◽  
pp. 1045-1059 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ray Brown

AbstractWe show, using elementary methods, that for 0 < a the measure-preserving, orientation-preserving Hénon map, H, has a horseshoe. This improves on the result of Devaney and Nitecki who have shown that a horseshoe exists in this map for a ≥ 8. For a > 0, we also prove the conjecture of Devaney that the first symmetric homoclinic point is transversal.To obtain our results, we show that for a branch, Cu, of the unstable manifold of a hyperbolic fixed point of H, Cu crosses the line y = − x and that this crossing is a homoclinic point, χc. This has been shown by Devaney, but we obtain the crossing using simpler methods. Next we show that if the crossing of Wu(p) and Ws(p) at χc is degenerate then the slope of Cu at this crossing is one. Following this we show that if χc is a degenerate homoclinic its x-coordinate must be greater than l/(2a). We then derive a contradiction from this by showing that the slope of Cu at H-1(χc) must be both positive and negative, thus we conclude that χc is transversal.Our approach uses a lemma that gives a recursive formula for the sign of curvature of the unstable manifold. This lemma, referred to as ‘the curvature lemma’, is the key to reducing the proof to elementary methods. A curvature lemma can be derived for a very broad array of maps making the applicability of these methods very general. Further, since curvature is the strongest differentiability feature needed in our proof, the methods work for maps of the plane which are only C2.


2021 ◽  
pp. 1-54
Author(s):  
Song Pei ◽  
Xingyao Yin ◽  
Zhaoyun Zong ◽  
Kun Li

Resolution improvement always presents the crucial task in geological inversion. Band-limited characteristics of seismic data and noise make seismic inversion complicated. Specifically, geological inversion suffers from the deficiency of both low- and high-frequency components. We propose the fixed-point seismic inversion method to alleviate these issues. The problem of solving objective function is transformed into the problem of finding the fixed-point of objective function. Concretely, a recursive formula between seismic signal and reflection coefficient is established, which is characterized by good convergence and verified by model examples. The error between the model value and the inverted value is reduced to around zero after few iterations. The model examples show that in either case, that is, the seismic traces are noise-free or with a little noise, the model value can almost be duplicated. Even if the seismic trace is accompanied by the moderate noise, the optimal inverted results can still be obtained with the proposed method. The initial model constraint is further introduced into the objective function to increase the low-frequency component of the inverted results by adding prior information into the target function. The singular value decomposition (SVD) method is applied to the inversion framework, thus making a high improvement of anti-noise ability. At last, the synthetic models and seismic data are investigated following the proposed method. The inverted results obtained from the fixed-point seismic inversion are compared with those obtained from the conventional seismic inversion, and it is found that the former has a higher resolution than the latter.


2003 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robin R. Vallacher ◽  
Andrzej Nowak ◽  
Matthew Rockloff
Keyword(s):  

2000 ◽  
Vol 39 (02) ◽  
pp. 118-121 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Akselrod ◽  
S. Eyal

Abstract:A simple nonlinear beat-to-beat model of the human cardiovascular system has been studied. The model, introduced by DeBoer et al. was a simplified linearized version. We present a modified model which allows to investigate the nonlinear dynamics of the cardiovascular system. We found that an increase in the -sympathetic gain, via a Hopf bifurcation, leads to sustained oscillations both in heart rate and blood pressure variables at about 0.1 Hz (Mayer waves). Similar oscillations were observed when increasing the -sympathetic gain or decreasing the vagal gain. Further changes of the gains, even beyond reasonable physiological values, did not reveal another bifurcation. The dynamics observed were thus either fixed point or limit cycle. Introducing respiration into the model showed entrainment between the respiration frequency and the Mayer waves.


2016 ◽  
Vol 2017 (1) ◽  
pp. 17-30 ◽  
Author(s):  
Muhammad Usman Ali ◽  
◽  
Tayyab Kamran ◽  
Mihai Postolache ◽  
◽  
...  

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document