Period-doubling bifurcation
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In mathematics, a Period doubling bifurcation in a dynamical system is a bifurcation in which the system switches to a new behavior with twice the period of the original system. The hallmark of this is a Floquet multiplier of -1.
[edit] Example
Consider the following logistical map for a modified Phillips curve:
f(u) = β1 + β2e − u
where π is the actual inflation, πe is the expected inflation, u is the level of unemployment, and m − π is the money supply growth rate. Keeping and varying b, the system undergoes period doubling bifurcations, and after a point becomes chaotic, as illustrated in the bifurcation diagram on the right.
[edit] Period-halving bifurcation
A Period halving bifurcation in a dynamical system is a bifurcation in which the system switches to a new behavior with half the period of the original system. A series of period-halving bifurcations leads the system from chaos to order.
[edit] External links
- The Flip (Period Doubling) Bifurcation in Discrete Time, Dynamic Processes by Elmer G. Wiens