Separation of trajectories and its Relation to Entropy for Intermittent Systems with a Zero Lyapunov exponent (1006.4220v1)
Abstract: One dimensional intermittent maps with stretched exponential separation of nearby trajectories are considered. When time goes infinity the standard Lyapunov exponent is zero. We investigate the distribution of $\lambda_{\alpha}= \sum_{i=0}{t-1} \ln \left| M'(x_i) \right|/t{\alpha}$, where $\alpha$ is determined by the nonlinearity of the map in the vicinity of marginally unstable fixed points. The mean of $\lambda_{\alpha}$ is determined by the infinite invariant density. Using semi analytical arguments we calculate the infinite invariant density for the Pomeau-Manneville map, and with it obtain excellent agreement between numerical simulation and theory. We show that $\alpha \left< \lambda_{\alpha}\right>$ is equal to Krengel's entropy and to the complexity calculated by the Lempel-Ziv compression algorithm. This generalized Pesin's identity shows that $\left< \lambda_{\alpha}\right>$ and Krengel's entropy are the natural generalizations of usual Lyapunov exponent and entropy for these systems.
Paper Prompts
Sign up for free to create and run prompts on this paper using GPT-5.
Collections
Sign up for free to add this paper to one or more collections.