Tent map


In mathematics, the tent map with parameter μ is the real-valued function fμ defined by
the name being due to the tent-like shape of the graph of fμ. For the values of the parameter μ within 0 and 2, fμ maps the unit interval into itself, thus
defining a discrete-time dynamical system on it. In particular, iterating a point x0 in gives rise to a sequence :
where μ is a positive real constant. Choosing for instance the parameter μ=2, the effect of the function fμ may be viewed as the result of the operation of folding the unit interval in two, then stretching the resulting interval to get again the interval . Iterating the procedure, any point x0 of the interval assumes new subsequent positions as described above, generating a sequence xn in .
The case of the tent map is a non-linear transformation of both the bit shift map and the r=4 case of the logistic map.

Behaviour

The tent map with parameter μ=2 and the logistic map with parameter r=4 are topologically conjugate, and thus the behaviours of the two maps are in this sense identical under iteration.
Depending on the value of μ, the tent map demonstrates a range of dynamical behaviour ranging from predictable to chaotic.

Magnifying the orbit diagram

The asymmetric tent map is essentially a distorted, but still piecewise linear, version of the case of the tent map. It is defined by
for parameter. The case of the tent map is the present case of. A sequence will have the same autocorrelation function as will data from the first-order autoregressive process with independently and identically distributed. Thus data from an asymmetric tent map cannot be distinguished, using the autocorrelation function, from data generated by a first-order autoregressive process.