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Sensitivity, transitivity and chaos in non-autonomous discrete systems

Hongbo Zeng

Abstract

In this paper, we study properties of sensitivity, transitivity and chaos for non-autonomous discrete systems(NDS). Firstly, we present some different sufficient conditions for NDS to be chaotic. Then, we relate the transitivity with the sensitivity of NDS and give several sufficient conditions for NDS to be sensitive. We obtain that transitivity and dense periodic points imply sensitivity, and that transitive system is either sensitive or almost equicontinuous. The results improve and extend some existing ones. Besides, we give some examples to show that there is a significant difference between the theory of ADS and the theory of NDS. We get that almost periodic point and minimal point do not imply each other and that two definitions of minimal system are not equivalent for non-autonomous discrete systems. Finally, we introduce and study weakly sensitivity for non-autonomous discrete systems.

Sensitivity, transitivity and chaos in non-autonomous discrete systems

Abstract

In this paper, we study properties of sensitivity, transitivity and chaos for non-autonomous discrete systems(NDS). Firstly, we present some different sufficient conditions for NDS to be chaotic. Then, we relate the transitivity with the sensitivity of NDS and give several sufficient conditions for NDS to be sensitive. We obtain that transitivity and dense periodic points imply sensitivity, and that transitive system is either sensitive or almost equicontinuous. The results improve and extend some existing ones. Besides, we give some examples to show that there is a significant difference between the theory of ADS and the theory of NDS. We get that almost periodic point and minimal point do not imply each other and that two definitions of minimal system are not equivalent for non-autonomous discrete systems. Finally, we introduce and study weakly sensitivity for non-autonomous discrete systems.

Paper Structure

This paper contains 4 sections, 27 theorems, 75 equations.

Key Result

Lemma 1

Let $\{n_k\}$ an increasing sequence of positive integers, then for any $n \in\mathbb{N}$, there exist an integer $r(0\le r<n)$, a subsequence $\{n_{k_j}\}$ of $\{n_k\}$ and an increasing sequence of positive integers $\{q_j\}$ such that $n_{k_j}=nq_j+r$.

Theorems & Definitions (70)

  • Definition 1
  • Definition 2
  • Definition 3
  • Definition 4
  • Remark 1
  • Definition 5
  • Definition 6
  • Definition 7
  • Definition 8
  • Definition 9
  • ...and 60 more