Cycle Doubling, Merging And Renormalization in the Tangent Family
Abstract
In this paper we study the transition to chaos for the restriction to the real and imaginary axes of the tangent family \ Tt(z)=i t z\0< t≤ π. Because tangent maps have no critical points but have an essential singularity at infinity and two symmetric asymptotic values, there are new phenomena: as t increases we find single instances of "period quadrupling", "period splitting" and standard "period doubling"; there follows a general pattern of "period merging" where two attracting cycles of period 2n "merge" into one attracting cycle of period 2n+1, and "cycle doubling" where an attracting cycle of period 2n+1 "becomes" two attracting cycles of the same period. We use renormalization to prove the existence of these bifurcation parameters. The uniqueness of the cycle doubling and cycle merging parameters is quite subtle and requires a new approach. To prove the cycle doubling and merging parameters are, indeed, unique, we apply the concept of "holomorphic motions" to our context. In addition, we prove that there is an "infinitely renormalizable" tangent map Tt∞. It has no attracting or parabolic cycles. Instead, it has a strange attractor contained in the real and imaginary axes which is forward invariant and minimal under T2t∞. The intersection of this strange attractor with the real line consists of two binary Cantor sets and the intersection with the imaginary line is totally disconnected, perfect and unbounded.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.