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Transport and mixing processes in dynamical systems are often difficult to study analytically and therefore a variety of numerical methods have been developed. Finite-time Lyapunov exponents (FTLEs) or related stretching indicators are frequently used as a means to estimate transport barriers. Alternatively, eigenvectors, singular vectors, or Oseledets vectors of numerical transfer operators find almost-invariant sets, finite-time coherent sets, or time-asymptotic coherent sets, respectively, which are minimally dispersed under the dynamics. While these families of approaches (geometric FTLEs and the probabilistic transfer operator) often give compatible results, a formal link is still missing; here we present a small step toward providing a mathematical link.
We propose a new entropy-based methodology for estimating finite-time expansive behaviour along trajectories in autonomous and nonautonomous dynamical systems.
We introduce the finite-time entropy (FTE) field as a simple and flexible way to capture nonlinear stretching directly from the entropy growth experienced by a small localised density evolved by the transfer operator. The FTE construction elucidates in a straightforward way the connection between the evolution of probability densities and the local stretching experienced.
We develop an extremely simple and numerically efficient method of constructing an estimate of the FTE field.
The FTE field is instantaneously calculable from a numerical transfer operator -- a transition matrix of conditional probabilities that describes a discretised version of the dynamical system; once one has such a transition matrix, the FTE field may be computed ``for free''.
We also show (i) how to avoid long time integrations in autonomous and time-periodic systems, (ii) how to perform backward time computations by a fast matrix manipulation rather than backward time integration, and (iii) how to easily employ adaptive methods to focus on high-value FTE regions. |
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