Chaos [electronic resource] : A Program Collection for the PC / by Hans Jürgen Korsch, Hans-Jörg Jodl, Timo Hartmann.
Publisher: Berlin, Heidelberg : Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2008Edition: Third revised and enlarged editionDescription: XV, 341 p. With many Numerical Experiments. online resourceContent type:- text
- computer
- online resource
- 9783540748670
- Physics
- Computer mathematics
- Quantum physics
- Quantum computers
- Spintronics
- Statistical physics
- Dynamical systems
- Computational intelligence
- Physics
- Statistical Physics, Dynamical Systems and Complexity
- Quantum Information Technology, Spintronics
- Quantum Physics
- Mathematical Methods in Physics
- Computational Mathematics and Numerical Analysis
- Computational Intelligence
- 621 23
- QC174.7-175.36

Overview and Basic Concepts -- Nonlinear Dynamics and Deterministic Chaos -- Billiard Systems -- Gravitational Billiards: The Wedge -- The Double Pendulum -- Chaotic Scattering -- Fermi Acceleration -- The Duffing Oscillator -- Feigenbaum Scenario -- Nonlinear Electronic Circuits -- Mandelbrot and Julia Sets -- Ordinary Differential Equations -- Kicked Systems.
This new edition strives yet again to provide readers with a working knowledge of chaos theory and dynamical systems through parallel introductory explanations in the book and interaction with carefully-selected programs supplied on the accompanying diskette. The programs enable readers, especially advanced-undergraduate students in physics, engineering, and math, to tackle relevant physical systems quickly on their PCs, without distraction from algorithmic details. For the third edition of Chaos: A Program Collection for the PC, each of the previous twelve programs is polished and rewritten in C++ (both Windows and Linux versions are included). A new program treats kicked systems, an important class of two-dimensional problems, which is introduced in Chapter 13. Each chapter follows the structure: theoretical background; numerical techniques; interaction with the program; computer experiments; real experiments and empirical evidence; reference. Interacting with the many numerical experiments have proven to help readers to become familiar with this fascinating topic and even to enjoy the experience.