We propose a general method for constructing a minimal cover of high-dimensional chaotic attractors by embedded unstable recurrent patterns. By minimal cover we mean a subset of available patterns such that the approximation of chaotic dynamics by a minimal cover with a predefined proximity threshold is as good as the approximation by the full available set. The proximity measure, based on the concept of a directed Hausdorff distance, can be chosen with considerable freedom and adapted to the properties of a given chaotic system. In the context of a spatiotemporally chaotic attractor of the Kuramoto–Sivashinsky system on a periodic domain, we demonstrate that the minimal cover can be faithfully constructed even when the proximity measure is defined within a subspace of dimension much smaller than the dimension of space containing the attractor. We discuss how the minimal cover can be used to provide a reduced description of the attractor structure and the dynamics on it.
Read full abstract