Concept information
Preferred term
Poincaré map
Definition
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In mathematics, particularly in dynamical systems, a first recurrence map or Poincaré map, named after Henri Poincaré, is the intersection of a periodic orbit in the state space of a continuous dynamical system with a certain lower-dimensional subspace, called the Poincaré section, transversal to the flow of the system. More precisely, one considers a periodic orbit with initial conditions within a section of the space, which leaves that section afterwards, and observes the point at which this orbit first returns to the section. One then creates a map to send the first point to the second, hence the name first recurrence map. The transversality of the Poincaré section means that periodic orbits starting on the subspace flow through it and not parallel to it.
(Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poincar%C3%A9_map)
Broader concept
In other languages
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French
URI
http://data.loterre.fr/ark:/67375/PSR-MC37TMJR-F
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