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Thursday, February 02, 2017
4:00 PM - 5:00 PM

Wolff Lecture

Renormalization and Universality/Regular or Stochastic Dichotomy
Mikhail Lyubich, Mathematics Department, Institute for Math Sciences at Stony Brook ,

Part 1:  Renormalization is an opearator that relates the dynamics in various scales. Good control of this operator usually implies remarkable dynamical consequences, e.g., the universal shape of little M-copies. However, it is a difficult problem to gain such a control. We will outline a proof of the Feigenabaum-Coullet-Tresser Renormalization Conjecture, based upon Sullivan's, McMullen's and author's work from the 1990s. 

Part 2:  There are two types of the dynamics observed in the real quadratic family: regular dynamics governed by a unique attracting cycle, and stochastic dynamics governed by a unique absolutely continuous invariant mesaure. We will outline a proof of the Regular or Stochastic Dichotomy that asserts that almost any real quadratic map z^2+c, c\in [-2, 1/4], is either regular or stochastic, which gives a complete probabilistic picture of the dynamics in this family. The proof exploits the Yoccoz Puzzle and the Renormalization machineries. Based upon author's work from the 1990s.

For more information, please contact Mathematics Department by phone at 4335.