Power law asymptotics in the creation of strange attractors in the quasi-periodically forced quadratic family
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Let $\Phi$ be a quasi-periodically forced quadratic map, where the rotation constant $\omega$ is a Diophantine irrational. A strange non-chaotic attractor (SNA) is an invariant (under $\Phi$) attracting graph of a nowhere continuous measurable function $\psi$ from the circle $\mathbb{T}$ to $[0,1]$. This paper investigates how a smooth attractor degenerates into a strange one, as a parameter $\beta$ approaches a critical value $\beta_0$, and the asymptotics behind the bifurcation of the attractor from smooth to strange. In our model, the cause of the strange attractor is a so-called torus collision, whereby an attractor collides with a repeller. Our results show that the asymptotic minimum distance between the two colliding invariant curves decreases linearly in the parameter $\beta$, as $\beta$ approaches the critical parameter value $\beta_0$ from below. Furthermore, we have been able to show that the asymptotic growth of the supremum of the derivative of the attracting graph is asymptotically bounded from both sides by a constant times the reciprocal of the square root of the minimum distance above.
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