This page collects the videos of the lecture on Chaotic, Complex, and Evolving Environmental Systems in the winter term 2020/21. The corresponding slide sets are slightly modified from the older ones used here.

unit 1 – introduction & embedding

Motivation for the course, larger thematic setting, and introduction of some language.

1-1-intro (motivation, rough contents, and operation of the course)
1-2-intro (spaceship Earth and its operation)
MOVE breaker 1 [introduction, links to a short YouTube movie to get you moving 🙂 ]
1-3-intro (what is different with environmental systems and aspects of their representation)
0-info-processing (operational: how to deal with the information flood that likely comes with this course; “likely” because it is not just the material presented but all the lines that you may be enticed to follow on your own)

unit 2 – nonlinear dynamical systems I

Definition and illustration of dynamical systems, graphical and numerical solution of 1d-systems and linear stability of their fixpoints, Lipschitz continuity, example of logistic equation.

2-1-nds (definitions and discussion of different examples)
MOVE breaker 2 [links to YouTube]
2-2-nds (one-dimensional, continuous, and autonomous systems)

unit 3 – nonlinear dynamical systems II

Higher dimensional dynamical systems, linear stability of their fixpoints, and invariant sets and manifolds. Glycolysis model for illustration.

3-1-nds (characterization and linear stability of fixpoints)
MOVE breaker 3 [links to YouTube]
3-2-nds (invariant sets and manifolds)

unit 4 – nonlinear dynamical systems III

Topological limitations for differentiable dynamical systems, system transitions with bifurcations.

4-1-nds (topological limitations)
4-2-nds (saddle node, transcritical, and pitchfork bifurcations in 1 and 2d)
MOVE breaker 4 [links to YouTube]
4-3-nds (Hopf and homoclinic bifurcations in 2d)

unit 5 – discrete chaotic systems I

Deterministic chaos in dynamical systems that are discrete in time. Workhorse: logistic map.

5-1-dch (discrete is different, iterated functions, linear stability)
MOVE breaker 5 [links to YouTube]
5-2-dch (logistic map I: bifurcation diagram, stationary regime, period-doubling cascade with Feigenbaum numbers and universality)

unit 6 – discrete chaotic systems II

Chaotic regime of logistic map with universality also in this regime.

6-1-dch (transition into chaos, strange attractors, structures in chaotic regime: supertracks, supercycles)
MOVE breaker 6 [links to YouTube]
6-2-dch (supertracks and supercycles more quantitatively, windows and Sharkovskii’s theorem, crises)

unit 7 – discrete chaotic systems III

The horseshoe map as a simplification of the logistic map, and a bare bones strange attractor. The phenomenology of fluid flow reflected on the logistic map. How common is chaos in discrete and in continuous systems? Two-dimensional discrete chaotic systems.

7-1-dch (horseshoe map, logistic map and fluid dynamics)
MOVE breaker 7 [links to YouTube]
7-2-dch (how common is chaos? discrete chaos in two dimensions)

unit 8 – continuous chaotic systems I

Deterministic chaos in systems that are continuous in time: the physical pendulum, periodically driven and viscously damped.

8-1-cch (physics of the driven and viscously damped pendulum; sensitive dependence of trajectories on initial conditions and noise)
MOVE breaker 8 [links to YouTube]
8-2-cch (compact descriptions: trajectories → phase diagrams → Poincaré maps)

unit 9 – continuous chaotic systems II

Conservative vs dissipative systems; the nature of strange attractors, temporal analysis (instead of our common spatial analysis), and transitions in parameter space, all illustrated with the periodically driven and viscously damped pendulum.

9-1-cch (attractors and the nature of strange attractors)
9-2-cch (temporal analysis)
MOVE breaker 9 [links to YouTube]
9-3-cch (transitions in parameter space I: hysteresis, fragile regimes, symmetry bifurcatiion, transition to chaos)
9-4-cch (transitions in parameter space II: larger parameter ranges, multiplicative and additive perturbations)

unit 10 – continuous chaotic systems III

Fluid convection (Rayleigh-Bénard) and its abstraction into the L63 system, analysis as a dynamical system (fixpoints and non-chaotic regimes).

10-1-cch (Rayleigh-Bénard convection and its lowest-dimensional approximation)
MOVE breaker 10 [links to YouTube; that’s all for now, but I hope you got the kick and continue these exercises]
10-2-cch (L63: fixpoints, stability, non-chaotic regime)

unit 11 – continuous chaotic systems IV

The chaotic regime of the L63 system with a focus on the transition from stable fixpoints into chaos as parameter r increases from 0, with no intervening period-doubling cascade, but with an interval where stable fixpoints and the chaotic regime coexist stably, in separate domains of the state space. Still deeper understanding of the nature of strange attractors.

11-1-cch (general operation of L63 system with u3-axis playing the key role; transient chaos, introduction of Lorenz map)
11-2-cch (transition from regime with stable fixpoints to fully developed chaos; grand view of attracting set, cut along r-axis)

unit 12 – complexity fundamentals I

Complex vs chaotic systems; phenomenology of landscapes: critical slopes; more general geometries: fractal sets

12-1-cof (phenomenology of landscapes: critical slopes)
12-2-cof (fractal sets)

unit 13 – discrete complex systems I

Cellular automata, the workhorse for discrete complex systems and far beyond; the BTW sand pile model; basics of contact processes with percolation and identification of clusters

13-1-dco (cellular automata)
13-2-dco (BTW sand pile model)
13-3-dco (basics of contact processes)

unit 14 – discrete complex systems II

Forest fire models and contagious disease model.

14-1-dco (forest fires)
14-2-dco (contagious diseases)

unit 15 – complexity fundamentals II

Power law distributions for describing scale-free situations & an attempt to characterize complexity

15-1-cof (evidence for power law distributions in our environment)
15-2-cof (possible causes for power law distributions)
15-3-cof (characterizing complexity)

unit 16 – patterns I

Patterned landscapes and some physics behind them & the representation and classification of patterns and their dynamics

16-1-pat (sand ripples, crack networks, and vegetation patterns)
16-2-pat (representation and classification)

unit 17 – patterns II

The Swift-Hohenberg model, its construction and phenomenology

17-1-pat (Swift-Hohenberg model – construction)
17-2-pat (Swift-Hohenberg model – phenomenology)

unit 18 – patterns III

The reaction-diffusion model, a large class of process-based representations.

18-1-pat (reaction-diffusion model – construction & linear stability analysis)
18-2-pat (Turing instability, Gray-Scott model)

unit 19 – population dynamics I

Fundamentals of population dynamics and the case of well-mixed stochastic systems.

19-1-pop (definitions and fundamentals of population dynamics)
19-2-pop (dynamics of one- and two-species population in well-mixed (non-spatial) stochastic regime)

unit 20 – population dynamics II

Deterministic two-species interactions in non-spatial domains. Hence, two large populations in a common domain, with each population easily capable to traverse the whole domain.

20-1-pop (competition-cooperation or p-process)
20-2-pop (predator-prey or s-process)

unit 21 – population dynamics III

Spatial domain with two and species coupled through s-process, hence a food chain.

21-1-pop (model formulation and setting of initial state)
21-2-pop (2 species predator-prey system)
21-3-pop (2 species predator-prey-grass system)

unit 22 – evolution I

Introduction to evolution with some definition, physical and chemical self-organization, necessities for and consequences of life, principles of Darwinian evolution.

22-1-evo (definitions and overview of Grand Unfolding)
22-2-evo (physical aggregation & self-organization; library of Babel)
22-3-evo (necessities for the emergence of life; Darwinian evolution; chemical self-organization and evolution; autocatalytic sets)

unit 23 – evolution II

From the origin of the biomolecular machinery to the origin of life.

23-1-evo (building blocks and operation of modern biomolecular machinery; from autocatalytic sets to the RNA world)
23-2-evo (a scenario for the origin of life: warm submarine hydrothermal vents; diversity of extant life)

unit 24 – evolution III

Oxygenation of system Earth with its major reorganization of global biogeochemical regimes and cycles, the subsequent emergence and radiation of animals, and major evolutionary transitions in individuality.

24-1-evo (dynamic Earth; the innovation of photosynthesis with the subsequent Great Oxygenation Event (GOE) and the final Neoproterozoic Oxygenation Event (NOE))
24-2-evo (the Ediacaran emergence of multicellular life, its rapid unfolding in the Cambrian radiation, and a major setback in the Permian-Triassic (PT) mass extinction as manifestations for: completion of a toolkit (invention) → delayed ecological impact (innovation) → saturation of accessible ecospace; overview of major evolutionary transitions in individuality)

unit 25 – evolution IV

Elements of an evolution mechanics for the unfolding’s front with some thoughts on evolutions in different fields, the self-replicator with its fundamental limitations as the central element, and the evolutionary spiral as a conceptual sketch for evolutions progression through major transitions in individuality.

25-1-evo (some thoughts on evolutions)
25-2-evo (imperfect self-replication leads to finite complexity; hierarchical modularity as way out)
25-3-evo (adaptive evolution of microorganisms; evolutionary spiral)

unit 26 – evolution V

A more comprehensive grasp on current life: the hierarchical structure of all beings, parasites as an evolutionary strategy and driving force, individuals as ecosystems (holobionts), and culture as the current front of evolutionary unfolding.

26-1-evo (the hierarchy of living beings; parasites, an evolutionary drive to the bottom while simultaneously driving the advancing front, with a glimpse on COVID-19)
26-2-evo (the individual as an ecosystems, a holobiont composed of the multicellular host and its symbiotic microbiota)
26-3-evo (culture – no, not humankind’s –, the line-up for the next major evolutionary transition with eusocial groups and superorganismal individuals)

unit 27 – evolution VI

Humankind’s cultural evolution, its emergence and unfolding, and the situation in transition today.

27-1-evo (emergence and unfolding of humankind’s culture, with a proposition to see its revolutions as a sequence of bifurcations)
27-2-evo (the Great Acceleration; increase of capacity to process, transfer, and store information; prerequisites for self-consciousness)
27-3-evo (the technological front: globalization of services and telepresence)
27-4-evo (the societal front: hierarchy of challenges; what COVID-19 tells us about our societies)

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