MAT 335 Homework #5

Due: Monday, April 1 (this is no joke!), 4:30 pm
Please hand in to the math office (SS 4072).
Late penalty: -15% per day (weekend counted as one day)

Please hand in solutions to the problems that have a *. You may work in groups of up to two. Each group should hand in one assignment, with the names of the group members.
Please check these questions regularly as sometimes errors are corrected and the choice of problems to be handed in may be changed.

Last updated: March 26, pm.Note the correction to problem 12: ga = x3+ax.

Some useful formula



  • (1)
  • (2)
    Recall that a periodic point x of period k is stable if |(f k)'(x)| < 1, and is unstable if |(f k)'(x)| > 1.

    Suppose that x is a periodic point of f(x) of period k, and that {x, x1, x2, . . . , x k-1, x, x1, . . . } is the orbit of x.
  • (3*)
    Recall from the handout, Experiments with the Logistic Function, that the (stable) period 1 orbit of the logistic function split into a (stable) period 2 orbit at a = 3, then this period 2 orbit split into a (stable) period 4 orbit at a = 3.5, and that this period 4 orbit split into a (stable) period 8 orbit at around a = 3.56. (I put stable in parenthesis because the other periodic orbits are still there but they are now unstable so the time series experiment doesn't see them, eg., when the period 4 orbit appears the period 2 orbit is still there but it has become unstable, etc - you can check using the applet Bifurcation that those unstable orbits are indeed there by looking at the graphs of f 2, f 4 and f 8).

    On page 4 of the Experiments with Logistic handout we see a period 8 orbit for a = 3.56 (note that the parameter r on that handout is the parameter a we have been using in these notes). On the handout is indicated the ordering of the points in the orbit (in particular, the orbit is {0.889, 0.349, 0.809, 0.551, 0.881, 0.373, 0.833, 0.494, etc}). Explain this ordering by going back to the period 2 orbit and how this gave the ordering for the period 4 orbit that appeared which in turn gave the ordering for the period 8 orbit. You will use the applet Bifurcation to analyse the graphs of f 2, f 4, and f 8. (In other words, why isn't the period 8 orbit ordered like {0.349, 0.373, 0.551, 0.494, 0.889, 0.833, 0.809, 0.881 etc } for example?)
  • (4*)
    Use graphical iteration to study the orbits of the following functions (i.e., find any fixed points and determine their stability and stable sets);
  • (5*)
    (See the notes, Graphical Analysis, page 3.)
    Use graphical iteration to verify that {-1,1,2,3} is indeed an orbit of your function.
  • (6)
    Suppose a point x is a periodic point of a function f(x) with period k. What other periods could x possibly have? (Hint: Consider the prime factorization of k.) Conclude that if k is a prime number, then k is the prime period of x (recall that the prime period of x is the smallest integer m such that x has period m). Don't forget that 1 is not a prime number! .....
  • (7)
    Let f(x) = 4x(1-x). By studying the graphs of f(x), f 2(x), f 3(x), f 4(x), f 5(x), and f 6(x), along with the diagonal y = x, show that f(x) has a periodic point of prime period 2, a periodic point of prime period 4, and a periodic point of prime period 6. Why does f(x) have a periodic point of prime period 3 and prime period 5? (you can use problem (6) to answer this last question too.) Show that in fact f(x) has two (distinct) period 3 orbits and three (distinct) period 4 orbits (Hint: How many period three and period 4 points does f have?). Notice that I am asking how many distinct periodic orbits f has, not how many distinct periodic points f has.
    How many (distinct) period 6 orbits does f have?
    In all these questions you should realize that every point in a period k orbit will be a fixed point of f k, and conversely that every fixed point of f k belongs to a period k orbit.

    Here are the graphs of [f 3, f], [f 4, f 2], and [f 6, f 3, f 2] (although you should be able to sketch them without the use of a computer by first locating the 'peaks'of f k via 'backwards graphical iteration' of the point 1/2 (which is the peak of f) ):

  • (8*)
    Find an orbit of T ~ (the transformation on binary sequences) with prime period 3. Use your answer to find a periodic point of f(x) = 4x(1-x) with prime period 3. Use the applet Graphical Iteration to verify your answer and to study the stability of this periodic orbit.
  • (9*)
    Find a periodic point of T that lies in the interval [9/32, 10/32], and from this find a periodic point of f(x)=4x(1-x) that lies in the interval [0.1828, 0.2222]. (Hint: Start with the binary expansions of 9/32 and 10/32 and consider T ~.) What is the smallest period such a point can have? The longest period?
  • (10)
  • (11)
    Can the Shadowing Lemma be used to justify the following two statements?
  • (12*)
    Draw the bifurcation diagram and the final state diagram of ga(x) = x3 + ax for a from -2.5 to +2. Do not try to solve the equation ga(x) = x to find the fixed points; instead, use the plots below of the graphs of g and g2 for various a (a = 2, 1, 0, -1, -1.2, -1.5, -2, -2.5) to sketch the bifurcation diagram. You will, however, need to determine the stability of the periodic points (for the final state diagram). You may use the fact that ga has no periodic points of prime period greater than 2 for these values of a.

















    A plot of g, g2 and g4:








    * * * * * End of Homework 5! * * * * *







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