# A topologically mixing subshift with multiple measures of maximal entropy

Let Σp={1,...,p} be the full shift on p symbols, and let X ⊂ Σp be a subshift -- that is, a closed σ-invariant subset, where $\sigma\colon \Sigma_p\to \Sigma_p$ is the left shift. Then σ is expansive, and hence there exists a measure of maximal entropy (an mme) for (X,σ).

It is well known that if X is a subshift of finite type on which σ is topologically mixing, then there is a unique mme. (See, for example, Rufus Bowen, Equilibrium states and the ergodic theory of Anosov diffeomorphisms, 1975. In fact, Bowen proves uniqueness of equilibrium states for any Hölder continuous potential φ, but let's stick with the case φ≡0 for now.)

If X is not a subshift of finite type, then less is known. For example, if X is a β-shift, then it has a unique mme, but it is not known if this holds for subshifts that are factors of a β-shift.

Question: Does anybody know of a subshift that is topologically mixing but does not have a unique mme? (That is, a subshift that has multiple measures of maximal entropy despite being topologically mixing.)

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Subshifts which are not of finite type are, as a general class, quite well understood. In terms of their measurable ergodic theory, they can do pretty much anything which is not prevented by entropy. An example is the following theorem of Jewett. Suppose that $T$ is an ergodic measure-preserving transformation of a probability space $(Z,\mathcal{F},\mu)$, and the entropy of $T$ with respect to $\mu$ is finite. Let $p$ be an integer such that $\log p$ is strictly greater than the entropy of $T$ with respect to $\mu$. Then there is a subshift $X$ of $\Sigma_p$, having a unique invariant measure $\nu$, such that the measure-preserving transformation $(X,\mathcal{B},\nu,\sigma)$ is measurably isomorphic to the transformation $(Z,\mathcal{F},\mu,T)$. (Here $\mathcal{B}$ of course denotes the Borel sigma-algebra of $X$.)