The computing procedure of λmax is as follows: Suppose the time series is X {x1, x2..., xN}, 1)
Compute time delay τ, embedding dimension m, and mean period p. 2) Reconstruct phase space using τ and m.
(3)
In which, i =1, 2, ···, M; N = M + (m − 1) τ. The reconstructed phase space is denoted as {Yj, j = 1, 2, ···, M}. 3) Search for the nearest neighbor Yˆj, which minimizes the distance to the particular reference point Yj .This is expressed as follows:
(4) Where >p, dj (0) is the initial distance from the jth point to its nearest neighbor, and ||...|| denotes the Euclidean norm. 4) Compute the distance between the jth pair of nearest neighbors after i discrete-time steps, which is as follows:
(5)
in which, i =1, 2, ··· ,min(M − j, M − ˆ j). 5) Compute the average line defined by
(6)
Where Δt is the sampling period of the time series, <..> denotes the average over all values of j. 6) The Largest Lyapunov Exponent is the slope of the least- squares fit to the average line y (i). The results for the Henon’s mapping are demonstrated in Figure 4. The diagram inclination has been calculated with the aid of the least-square technique. We have obtained the value λmax = 0.403 that almost corresponds to the theoretical one (λmax = 0.418)
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