Abstract

We investigate the dynamics of a family of one-dimensional linear-power maps. This family has been studied by many authors mainly in the continuous case, associated with Nordmark systems. In the discontinuous case, which is much less studied, the map has vertical and horizontal asymptotes giving rise to new kinds of border collision bifurcations. We explain a mechanism of the interplay between smooth bifurcations and border collision bifurcations with singularity, leading to peculiar sequences of attracting cycles of periods $n,2n$, $4n-1$, $2(4n-1)$, ..., $n≥3$. We show also that the transition from invertible to noninvertible map may lead abruptly to chaos, and the role of organizing center in the parameter space is played by a particular bifurcation point related to this transition and to a flip bifurcation. Robust unbounded chaotic attractors characteristic for certain parameter ranges are also described. We provide proofs of some properties of the considered map. However, the complete description of its rich bifurcation structure is still an open problem.

Highlights

  • The large number of applied models characterized by sharp switching between different states are described by nonsmooth systems

  • We have considered some bifurcations occurring in the 1D discontinuous linear-power map f defined in (1), where a, b, γ > 0 and μ < 0 are real parameters

  • The case a < 0, b < 0 is related to an invertible map for which we have proved that particular sets of 2-cycles and 4-cycles are involved both in smooth and border collision bifurcations, leading to coexistence with an attracting fixed point

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Summary

A FAMILY OF DISCONTINUOUS LINEAR-POWER MAPS

Department of Economics, Society and Politics, University of Urbino via Saffi 42, 61029 Urbino (PU), Italy Department of Mathematical Sciences, Sharif University of Technology, Tehran, Iran Azadi St., Tehran, P.O.Box 11365-11155, Iran Institute of Mathematics, National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine 3 Tereshchenkivska st., 01601 Kyiv, Ukraine (Communicated by Miguel Sanjuan)

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