Chaotic Dynamical Systems

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  • Опубликовано: 11 сен 2024

Комментарии • 46

  • @juliogodel
    @juliogodel Год назад +40

    A whole series of 60hrs is necessary here :) Thank you!

    • @Septumsempra8818
      @Septumsempra8818 Год назад +4

      As long as the code is provided, I'm happy to spend the 60hrs

  • @StankyPickle1
    @StankyPickle1 Год назад +21

    Yes! More videos on Sympletic and Variational integrators please! 🙏

    • @cerbahsamir5119
      @cerbahsamir5119 Год назад

      Yesss

    • @4SRKS
      @4SRKS Год назад +1

      Would also be super interested in a video about RKF78 👍🏻

  • @javadrahmannezhad9908
    @javadrahmannezhad9908 Год назад +5

    Amazing definition of chaotic systems with very interesting example videos. Thank you for the energy you put into your lectures.

  • @michaeljmcguffin
    @michaeljmcguffin Год назад +8

    This is some of the best content on youtube. Thank you for making these!!

  • @hoseinzahedifar1562
    @hoseinzahedifar1562 Год назад +5

    Thank you very much for this interesting lecture...
    Homework (Excercise):
    In time 27:14: you should write down double pendulum equations of motion (from the Euler-Lagrange or Hamiltonian equations), and use the (classic) RK4 integration scheme for the problem to compute the trajectory of the double pendulum system. Utilizing the trajectory, calculate the system's energy and plot it versus time.

  • @xsk8rat
    @xsk8rat Год назад +1

    A few screen-shots have been saved to the directory: "OverExplainingWeatherPerson". But a great wrapper on this series! Thank you!

  • @PeterHavelock
    @PeterHavelock Год назад

    Fascinating lecture. I was one of the last people to walk across the Millennium Bridge before the police stopped people crossing. I did not see anyone all all fours but it was certainly alarmingly wobbly.

  • @sarahcorvidae3573
    @sarahcorvidae3573 Год назад +1

    This was a great journey - I enjoyed this course and learned a lot! Thank you and looking forward to more!

  • @mintakan003
    @mintakan003 Год назад

    This was a great overview video. I was blown away by the metronomes synchronizing. Was scratching my head, on what would be the math, that can explain the eventual trajectory. Also, lots of other examples, relevant to space flight, such the (chaotic) dance amongst planetary bodies.

  • @iuriblancos
    @iuriblancos Месяц назад

    Amazing! Thank you for sharing such a valuable material on youtube.

  • @ajred0581
    @ajred0581 9 месяцев назад

    I’m a high schooler taking calculus 3, and I love your videos. In college I am planning on combining computer science and physics, and your videos solidified this idea 😊

  • @YangmeiLin-hu5mg
    @YangmeiLin-hu5mg 3 месяца назад

    Thank you so much for these fantastic lectures! 🎊🎊🎊

  • @raktimpal641
    @raktimpal641 Год назад +3

    Learnt a lot. Thank you for the great lecture. 🙏

  • @indiablackwell
    @indiablackwell Год назад +1

    OMG, at 33:00 I actually horrified for a second that Steve was doing a commercial

  • @AirAdventurer194
    @AirAdventurer194 Год назад

    Fascinating video! 1) Interesting to see you mention Jerry Marsden. 2) Have you ever communicated with Jim Yorke? He is a co-author of the paper that introduced the term "chaotic differential equation" and gave a lecture at UWM involving chaos in the double-pendulum. 3) Settle a bet: have you ever learned the Lebesgue integral in your studies? (I'll explain the "bet" later if you like.)

  • @TranquilSeaOfMath
    @TranquilSeaOfMath Год назад

    Really nice video. That 3rd generation double pendulum was amazing!

  • @sergioh5515
    @sergioh5515 Год назад +1

    Absolutely amazing stuff here!

  • @alexbraun8875
    @alexbraun8875 Год назад

    Merry Christmas...ANd thank you so much for your clear and concise lectures

  • @rushabhyeshwante
    @rushabhyeshwante Год назад

    Thank you for explaining chaos with videos.

  • @thiloherold7087
    @thiloherold7087 Год назад +1

    This is, as usual, a fantastic video. Especially the simulations/video clips help the understanding of this fascinating topic. :)
    However, I have one addition to make, the Lorenz attractor and other chaotic systems aren't necessarily non-deterministic. In fact the lorenz system is an example for a deterministic chaotic system. Simply due to the fact that if you'd knew the initial condition perfectly you could predict your future trajectory with 100% precision. This is a mathematical argument since physics tells us that we can't measure everything perfectly and computer science tells us that we we have rounding errors when storing and simulating data.
    Again, no offense I enjoy your videos very much! :) But this little detail bothered me a bit.

  • @liboyan7010
    @liboyan7010 Год назад +1

    Great lecture!!!

  • @pablo_CFO
    @pablo_CFO Год назад

    I really need a complete series about Lagrangian Coherent Structures.
    Do it as a Christmas miracle 😅

  • @Juanderingbot
    @Juanderingbot 8 месяцев назад +1

    Min 33 says it all

  • @abdoubett4223
    @abdoubett4223 Год назад

    great video , please do the Symplectic and the Variational.

  • @user-nb6bo6hl6d
    @user-nb6bo6hl6d 2 месяца назад

    excellent

  • @joehopfield
    @joehopfield 6 месяцев назад +1

    As an old gymnast the double pendulum and controlling chaos with minimal energy is ... everything.

  • @murillonetoo
    @murillonetoo Год назад +1

    Great lecture, professor! In addition to chaotic, turbulence can be also considered random. This makes me wonder whether there is any relation between chaos and randomness. Could you comment something about this?

    • @Miguel_Noether
      @Miguel_Noether Год назад

      Chaos is not random, we have a system of differential equations, everything is deterministic. But if you don't know exactly your initial conditions, then in this kind of systems you won't be able to determine the state of your system arbitraryly at long times

  • @Virsconte
    @Virsconte Год назад

    Ok, so if you have a system with control inputs, like the inverted double pendulum, is it possible to apply symplectic integrators? It seems like whenever you have a motor or whatever, you're going to be adding or removing energy, so the fundamental assumption of those integrators is not met. Buuut, you know exactly where and how much energy is being added or removed (i.e. only through the actuators), so maybe it's possibly to exploit that? Like I don't know if this makes any sense, but if you pretended the motor in the double pendulum model had a battery, and added a term for the electric potential to the Hamiltonian?

  • @lgl_137noname6
    @lgl_137noname6 Год назад

    THANK YOU !!!

  • @UsefulMotivation365
    @UsefulMotivation365 Год назад

    About the pendulums: if both depends on the initial conditions and you started both with the same initial conditions and their behavior differ, then they don't depend on the initial conditions

    • @ivanlopez8018
      @ivanlopez8018 Год назад

      The pendulums weren't started in the same conditions. The key here is to show that the smallest difference between initial conditions makes a big difference in the long run in these chaotic systems. Although through the human eye, the pendulums start in the same position and the same conditions, there are small variations (not only position, also drag variations, mechanic losses etc)

  • @brysab5679
    @brysab5679 Год назад

    it might have a small error or i just didnt correctly understand it. About the simpletic integrator, why q = -dh/dp? q is supposed to be the position but take the partial derivative of momentum p.

    • @brysab5679
      @brysab5679 Год назад

      I mean it's a sort of inverse hamiltonian equation of dp/dt = -dH/dq and dq/dt = dh/dp.... hope it's a comprehensible input.

  • @DennisZIyanChen
    @DennisZIyanChen Год назад

    how has any of this applied in real life to make everyday life better for people?

  • @chensong254
    @chensong254 Год назад

    In a chaotic system, why does it make sense to use floating point numbers in computers if they intrinsically have round-off errors?

    • @michaeljmcguffin
      @michaeljmcguffin Год назад +1

      You might find the article on "Interval arithmetic" on Wikipedia interesting.

    • @alexanderskusnov5119
      @alexanderskusnov5119 Год назад

      It's not an error of computing, it's an error of input data (and the right model).

  • @d7ffab979
    @d7ffab979 Год назад

    With ur dark pulli and dark background and no legs u look like a metaverse character. Great work anyways, thanks, as always!

  • @bilalsadiq3495
    @bilalsadiq3495 Год назад

    Dear Professor Brunton, please try to make videos on how to code such question (possibly on MATLAB) and one thing I have notice you didn't talk about much on simulink .so please try to make videos on how to code them NOT THIS LECTURE BASED AS THERE ARE NUMEROUS LITERATURE AVAILABLE ONLINE
    thank you
    \

  • @byronwatkins2565
    @byronwatkins2565 Год назад

    Identical twins begin as a single egg with identical DNA. Their lives often re-converge somewhat for a time, but they ultimately live very different lives. The difference in chemistry must be due to dietary and life choices. And many of the limitations in options are due to how finite resources get shared. One wife, for example, can marry only one of the twins. But differences in experiences lead to differences in attitudes and in making different choices even when given similar options.

  •  Год назад +1

    The double pendulum you showed was pretty nice, and made me think of this triple pendulum that's worth giving a look as well: ruclips.net/video/meMWfva-Jio/видео.html