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- The Computational Beauty of Nature, by Gary William Flake.
See also the book's homepage at http://mitpress.mit.edu/books/FLAOH/cbnhtml/home.html where you can obtain the source code for many of the plotting programs and simulations used in Flake's book.
- Fractals and Chaos, by P.A. Addison.
- Nonlinear Physics with Maple, by R.H. Enns and G.C. McGuire, 2nd Edition. This book comes with a CD containing useful Maple files.
- Nonliear Dynamics and Chaos, by S.H. Strogatz.
- The figures used in this chapter were taken from the website of Ref.[1] (those with copyright notice attached below the figure caption) or generated using the Maple software in the CD that comes with Ref.[3]. Some other figures used in the lectures were taken from Ref[4].
- The Predictors, by T. Bass.
- The freeware FRACTINT, easily available on the internet, contains software for plotting strange attractors and bifurcation diagrams of many chaotic systems, and also of fractals.
- A pedagogical website on non-linear dynamics is at
http://www.apmaths.uwo.ca/ bfraser/version1/nonlinearlab.html
- An introductory web-book on Chaos is at http://hypertextbook.com/chaos/
- Some engineering applications of Chaos are mentioned in
http://www.ornl.gov/etd/etdchaos.htm
Next: Equilibrium Systems
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Previous: Exercises
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Rajesh Parwani
2002-01-03