Abstract:
Lorenz attractors are important objects in the modern theory of chaos. The reason,
on the one hand, is that they are encountered in various natural applications (fluid dynamics,
mechanics, laser dynamics, etc.). On the other hand, Lorenz attractors are robust in the sense
that they are generally not destroyed by small perturbations (autonomous, nonautonomous,
stochastic). This allows us to be sure that the object observed in the experiment is exactly a
chaotic attractor rather than a long-time periodic orbit.
Discrete-time analogs of the Lorenz attractor possess even more complicated structure — they
allow homoclinic tangencies of invariant manifolds within the attractor. Thus, discrete Lorenz
attractors belong to the class of wild chaotic attractors. These attractors can be born in
codimension-three local and certain global (homoclinic and heteroclinic) bifurcations. While
various homoclinic bifurcations leading to such attractors have been studied, for heteroclinic
cycles only cases where at least one of the fixed points is a saddle-focus have been considered
to date.
In the present paper the case of a heteroclinic cycle consisting of saddle fixed points with a
quadratic tangency of invariant manifolds is considered. It is shown that, in order to have
three-dimensional chaos such as the discrete Lorenz attractors, one needs to avoid the existence
of lower-dimensional global invariant manifolds. Thus, it is assumed that either the quadratic
tangency or the transversal heteroclinic orbit is nonsimple. The main result of the paper is
the proof that the original system is the limiting point in the space of dynamical systems of a
sequence of domains in which the diffeomorphism possesses discrete Lorenz attractors.
Keywords:heteroclinic orbit, rescaling, 3D Hénon map, bifurcation, Lorenz attractor.