Attractors for infinite-dimensional non-autonomous dynamical systems / Alexandre N. Carvalho, José A. Langa, James C. Robinson
Type de document : MonographieCollection : Applied mathematical sciences, 182Langue : anglais.Pays: Etats Unis.Éditeur : New York : Springer, cop. 2013Description : 1 vol. (XXXVI-409 p.) : fig. ; 25 cmISBN: 9781461445807.ISSN: 0066-5452.Bibliographie : Bibliogr. p. 393-403. Index.Sujet MSC : 37-02, Research exposition (monographs, survey articles) pertaining to dynamical systems and ergodic theory37B55, Topological dynamics, Topological dynamics of nonautonomous systems
37C60, Smooth dynamical systems: general theory, Nonautonomous smooth dynamical systems
37C70, Smooth dynamical systems: general theory, Attractors and repellers and their topological structure
37D05, Dynamical systems with hyperbolic behavior, Dynamical systems with hyperbolic orbits and sets
37D10, Dynamical systems with hyperbolic behavior, Invariant manifold theory for dynamical systems
37L30, Infinite-dimensional dissipative dynamical systems, Attractors and their dimensions, Lyapunov exponentsEn-ligne : Springerlink | Zentralblatt | MathSciNet
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Bibliogr. p. 393-403. Index
This book treats the theory of pullback attractors for non-autonomous dynamical systems. While the emphasis is on infinite-dimensional systems, the results are also applied to a variety of finite-dimensional examples. The purpose of the book is to provide a summary of the current theory, starting with basic definitions and proceeding all the way to state-of-the-art results. As such it is intended as a primer for graduate students, and a reference for more established researchers in the field. The basic topics are existence results for pullback attractors, their continuity under perturbation, techniques for showing that their fibres are finite-dimensional, and structural results for pullback attractors for small non-autonomous perturbations of gradient systems (those with a Lyapunov function). The structural results stem from a dynamical characterisation of autonomous gradient systems, which shows in particular that such systems are stable under perturbation. Application of the structural results relies on the continuity of unstable manifolds under perturbation, which in turn is based on the robustness of exponential dichotomies: a self-contained development of these topics is given in full. After providing all the necessary theory the book treats a number of model problems in detail, demonstrating the wide applicability of the definitions and techniques introduced: these include a simple Lotka-Volterra ordinary differential equation, delay differential equations, the two-dimensional Navier-Stokes equations, general reaction-diffusion problems, a non-autonomous version of the Chafee-Infante problem, a comparison of attractors in problems with perturbations to the diffusion term, and a non-autonomous damped wave equation. (Source : Springer)
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