This book focuses on bifurcation theory for autonomous and nonautonomous
differential equations with discontinuities of different types - those
with jumps present either in the right-hand side, or in trajectories or
in the arguments of solutions of equations. The results obtained can be
applied to various fields, such as neural networks, brain dynamics,
mechanical systems, weather phenomena and population dynamics.
Developing bifurcation theory for various types of differential
equations, the book is pioneering in the field. It presents the latest
results and provides a practical guide to applying the theory to
differential equations with various types of discontinuity. Moreover, it
offers new ways to analyze nonautonomous bifurcation scenarios in these
equations. As such, it shows undergraduate and graduate students how
bifurcation theory can be developed not only for discrete and continuous
systems, but also for those that combine these systems in very different
ways. At the same time, it offers specialists several powerful
instruments developed for the theory of discontinuous dynamical systems
with variable moments of impact, differential equations with piecewise
constant arguments of generalized type and Filippov systems.