AbstractOpen maps, as introduced in concurrency theory by Joyal, Nielsen and Winskel, provide an abstract way to define functional bisimulations across a wide variety of models of computation (like labelled transition systems, event structures, etcetera). Furthermore, the existence of a span of open maps characterises the well-known relational definition of bisimulations found in the literature associated with these models of computation. However, in our working category of prefix orders (in which the objects represent the sets of executions generated by arbitrary dynamical systems) the open maps do not immediately result in functional bisimulations and the existence of a span of open maps does not result in an equivalence. This is rather s...