Skip to main content

All Questions

Filter by
Sorted by
Tagged with
0 votes
1 answer
64 views

Transitive map on a profinite group

Let $f$ be a continuous endomorphism of a compact Hausdorff totally disconnected topological group $G$ and let $H$ be a closed normal subgroup of G such that $f(H)\subseteq H$ and with $\mu(H)=0$ ...
Nick Belane's user avatar
3 votes
1 answer
145 views

Topological amenability of actions - forgetting topology

Let $G$ be a (countable) discrete group and let $X$ be a locally compact Hausdorff space. Assume that $G$ acts on $X$ by homeomorphisms. Recall that the action is (topologically) amenable if there ...
Alcides Buss's user avatar
4 votes
0 answers
108 views

Decidability of whether two polynomial bijections generate a free group

I am wondering about the decidability of the following question: Given two polynomial bijections $f, g$ from the real numbers to the real numbers (with say rational coefficient just to simplify what &...
Sprotte's user avatar
  • 1,075
-1 votes
1 answer
300 views

Is this submonoid of the isometry group on $\Bbb Q_2$ closed to inverses? [closed]

Let $\textrm{aff}(ax+b)$ be the affine group on $\Bbb Z_2^\times$ i.e. the set of linear polynomials over 2-adic numbers with $a\in\Bbb Z_2^\times, b\in\Bbb Z_2$ Now let $X$ be the restriction of its ...
Robert Frost's user avatar
2 votes
3 answers
457 views

Intersection of Fourier analysis (especially on the transform) and group theory, number theory, dynamical systems, etc

I am considering a PhD research topic. I only have a math Bachelor's degree with working experience mostly in teaching and I have been working on a paper. I have deep interest in Fourier Series and ...
2 votes
0 answers
153 views

Proof of Zimmer's cocycle super-rigidity theorem

I was reading the proof of Zimmer's cocycle super-rigidity theorem from the book 'Ergodic theory and semi-simple groups' by Robert Zimmer (Theorem 5.2.5, page 98). But I am not able to understand it. ...
John Depp's user avatar
  • 331
1 vote
1 answer
192 views

Topological full groups of subshifts: differences between one-dimensional and multi-dimensional subshifts

For a multidimensional subshift $X$ over $\mathbb Z^d$, the topological full group $[X]$ is the set of homeomorphisms $f$ of $X$ that can be written as $f : x \mapsto \sigma_{c(x)}(x)$ with $c : X \to ...
Numbra's user avatar
  • 113
0 votes
0 answers
118 views

A measure on the group of homeomorphisms of $\mathbb T^2$

Let us consider the group of measure-preserving homeomorphisms of $\mathbb T^2$ (with transformations identified if they agree almost everywhere) called $G[\mathbb T^2, \mathcal L^2]$. We shall ...
user490373's user avatar
1 vote
0 answers
177 views

Building random homeomorphisms of the torus $\mathbb T^2$

In https://arxiv.org/abs/0912.3423, a family of random homeomorphisms of the circle is constructed. Main Question: Can the construction be generalized to higher space dimensions, e.g. to $\mathbb T^2$?...
user490373's user avatar
3 votes
0 answers
115 views

Malliavin-Shavgulidze (type) measures on the group of measure-preserving invertible maps on $\mathbb T$?

The Malliavin-Shavgulidze measures on $\operatorname{Diff}^{1}(I)$ (with $I$ an interval of $\mathbb R$) are defined as the image $W_{\sigma} \circ f^{-1}$ of the Wiener measure $W_{\sigma}$ with ...
user490373's user avatar
11 votes
0 answers
258 views

Minimal actions commuting with amenable actions of $\mathbb{F}_2$

For a countable discrete group $G$ acting by homeomorphisms on a compact metrizable space $X$, we say that $G\curvearrowright X$ is (topologically) amenable if there exists a sequence of continuous ...
Shirly Geffen's user avatar
5 votes
2 answers
228 views

Bound on the period of the identity (in a free group) for an automorphism followed by left-multiplication

Let $F$ be a finite-rank free group, $g$ an element of $F$ and $\Phi\colon F \to F$ an automorphism. Consider the dynamical system $\psi_g\colon F \to F$ defined by $x \mapsto g\Phi(x)$. Say that $g$ ...
Robbie Lyman's user avatar
  • 1,996
6 votes
2 answers
379 views

About Lie group $G$ has this escape property?

Every Lie group $G$ has the following escape property: For every $x \ne e$ in a sufficiently small neighborhood $U$ of the identity $e$ in $G$, there is a integer $n$ such that $x^n$ is not in $U$. ...
free's user avatar
  • 71
1 vote
0 answers
88 views

Sequences generated from commuted quaternions and general commuted linear transformations

Given a pair of non-commuting linear transformations, $A$ and $B$, define the "next pair" in a sequence as $A*B$ and $B*A$. I am interested in finite cycles (i.e., the sequence eventually ...
bobuhito's user avatar
  • 1,547
3 votes
1 answer
361 views

Equivalent definitions of strongly proximal action

Consider the following fragment from the paper "C*-simplicity and the unique trace property for discrete groups" by Breuillard, Kalantar, Kennedy and Ozawa: I have two questions: (1) What ...
Andromeda's user avatar
  • 175
5 votes
0 answers
203 views

Terminology question in group actions

Given a continuous group action $G \times X \rightarrow X$ on a topological space $X$, is there a standard term for the subsets $K \subset X$ for which Every open neighborhood of $K$ intersects every ...
alvarezpaiva's user avatar
  • 13.5k
3 votes
1 answer
237 views

Invariant measure of a subgroup

Let $G$ be an abelian group with a $G$-invariant metric $d$. Let $H$ be a countable dense subgroup of $G$. Let $\mu$ be a non-atomic $\sigma$-finite Borel measure on $G$ that is $H$-invariant. Must it ...
James Leng's user avatar
6 votes
1 answer
224 views

Topologically mixing cellular automata on groups

For which group-alphabet pairs $(G, A)$ does $(G, A^G)$ admit a topologically mixing cellular automaton? Definitions: Let $G$ be a (discrete) group. An alphabet is a finite set of cardinality at ...
Ville Salo's user avatar
  • 6,652
4 votes
1 answer
314 views

Properties of the spectrum of the Koopman representation

Let $G$ be a discrete countable infinite group acting on a compact metric space $X$ via homeomorphisms preserving a probability measure $\mu$. A function $\lambda\colon G\to \mathbb C$ is an ...
Martha Łącka's user avatar
5 votes
2 answers
297 views

Seeking to understand meaning of "von Neumann spectrum" in a paper of Bader–Furman–Shaker

In attempting to understand the paper "Superrigidity, Weyl groups, and actions on the circle" of Uri Bader, Alex Furman and Ali Shaker (linked at Furman's page) I find that towards the end of the ...
Rupert's user avatar
  • 2,125
2 votes
0 answers
158 views

Finding invariant closed subspace which are also subgroups for the action of $\text{SL}(2, \Bbb Z)$ on $\Bbb R^n\times \Bbb R^n$

I recently came across to the following action of $\text{SL}(2,\Bbb Z)$ on the space $\Bbb R^n\times\Bbb R^n$ defined as $$ \begin{pmatrix} a & b \\ c & d \end{pmatrix}\cdot \big(v,\,w\big)\...
InsideOut's user avatar
  • 203
2 votes
1 answer
231 views

A reference to the fact that a topologically transitive action of a group on a compact metrizable space has a dense orbit

I need a proper reference to the following obvious fact: An action of a group $G$ on a nonempty compact metrizable space $K$ is topologically transitive (= the orbit $GU$ of any nonempty open set $...
Taras Banakh's user avatar
  • 41.9k
16 votes
1 answer
502 views

Group actions and "transfinite dynamics"

$\DeclareMathOperator\Sym{Sym}$I have a question about what I shall name here "transfinite dynamics" because it involves iterating a topological dynamical system $G \curvearrowright X$ ...
Burak's user avatar
  • 4,265
14 votes
1 answer
956 views

On the iterated automorphism groups of the cyclic groups

Let $C_n$ be the cyclic group of order $n$. Its automorphism group $Aut(C_n)$ is a group of order $\varphi(n)$ isomorphic to $(\mathbb{Z}/n\mathbb{Z})^{\times}$ the multiplicative group of integer ...
Sebastien Palcoux's user avatar
12 votes
1 answer
553 views

Topological amenability vs amenability of an action

Let $G$ be a discrete group and let $X$ be a compact, Hausdorff space. Assume that $G$ acts on $X$ by homeomorphisms. Consider the following two definitions: [$C^*$-algebras and finite dimensional ...
13829's user avatar
  • 121
7 votes
0 answers
286 views

Hyperbolic group with boundary $S^1$ implies virtually Fuchsian via bounded cohomology?

Question: Is there an approach to $\partial G \cong S^1$ implies virtually Fuchsian using bounded cohomology of $\mathrm{Homeo^+} (S^1)$? If not is there a reason to believe it wouldn't work, or maybe ...
user avatar
1 vote
0 answers
107 views

Relations between $\Omega$-groups, locally indicable groups, and right-orderable groups

We know that the class of right-orderable groups $\mathit{RO}$, is contained in the class of $\Omega$-groups (read it from "A note on group rings of certain torsion-free groups" by Burns-Hale). A ...
lunchmeat's user avatar
3 votes
3 answers
570 views

Free ergodic probability measure-preserving actions of the free group

Let $(X,\mathcal{B},\mu)$ be a standard Borel probability space. Let $\Gamma$ be a countable group. An action of $\Gamma$ on $X$ is: essentially free if for all $g \in \Gamma \setminus \{e \}$,...
Sebastien Palcoux's user avatar
13 votes
3 answers
882 views

Has dynamics on $G/\Gamma$ ever been used to prove interesting things about $\Gamma$?

Fix a Lie group $G$ and a discrete subgroup $\Gamma \subset G$. Homogeneous dynamics is about studying the actions of subgroups $H \subset G$ on the quotient $G/\Gamma$. Does anyone know of an ...
12 votes
0 answers
268 views

If two group actions lead to the same orbifold, are they conjugate?

In The Geometry and Topology of Three-Manifolds, Thurston says: "In these examples, it was not hard to construct the quotient space from the group action. In order to go in the opposite direction, we ...
Kiran Parkhe's user avatar
4 votes
1 answer
139 views

Asymptotic colouring of edges and vertices, and untwisting cocycles

This question regards colourings on edges and vertices on countable directed multigraphs. We start with an example. Let $G=\mathbb Z^2$. We define two functions $a_h$ and $a_v$ from $\mathbb Z^2$ to $\...
Alessandro Vignati's user avatar
3 votes
2 answers
448 views

Asymptotically invariant maps and strongly ergodic actions

Let $\Gamma$ be a countable group which acts strongly ergodically on a probability measure space $(X,\mu)$. Let $\sigma_k:X \rightarrow Y$ be a sequence of measurable functions into a complete metric ...
ness1's user avatar
  • 121
3 votes
1 answer
219 views

Action of homeomorphism on real line

An element $f ∈ Homeo^+(\mathbb{R})$ is said to be of : (1) type A, if it has a trivial germ at ∞ and it does not fix any point in an interval of the form (−∞, r). (2) type B, if it has a trivial ...
Ma Joad's user avatar
  • 1,755
5 votes
0 answers
210 views

Divisible orientation preserving diffeomorphism which is time-$1$ map of no smooth flow

Is there an orientation preserving smooth diffeomorphism $f$ on a compact manifold $M$ such that for every $n\in \mathbb{N}$, there is a smooth diffeomorphism $g:M \to M$, as $n$th root of ...
Ali Taghavi's user avatar
16 votes
3 answers
1k views

What are some interesting examples of non-classical dynamical systems? (Group action other than $\mathbb{Z}$ or $\mathbb{R}$ )

By classical dynamical system, I mean a measure space together with a measurable action of the integers or the reals. Of course, this action is often interpreted as evolution with respect to discrete ...
2 votes
1 answer
442 views

Action on a normal subgroup where each coset acts freely

Given a group G and a normal subgroup N of G, is there an action of G on N such that, whenever g,h are distinct members of the same N-coset, we have g•n≠h•n? If not, then can this be done in the case ...
Michael Cotton's user avatar
8 votes
4 answers
339 views

Iteration cycles of Z_n weights in path graphs: Why cycles of length 182 for a 6-node path?

Assign to the $n$ nodes of a path graph vertex weights forming a permutation of $(0,\ldots,n{-}1)$. Now iterate the following update repeatedly: Each node sums the weights of its neighbors, and that ...
Joseph O'Rourke's user avatar
15 votes
0 answers
477 views

Diffeomorphisms of $\mathbf R^n$

Let $G={\rm Diff}_0^c(\mathbf R^n)$, $n\geq 1$, be the group of compactly supported diffeomorphisms isotopic to the identity through compactly supported isotopies. Question: Is there an example to ...
Jarek Kędra's user avatar
  • 1,782
3 votes
1 answer
395 views

Waldspurger Formula as a Torus Integral

I have a research-level but not necessarily new question about certain equidistribution problems. If $\phi \in L^2(S^2)$ then we could define the Weyl sums: $$ \int \phi \, \mu_d = \frac{1}{|\mathcal{...
john mangual's user avatar
  • 22.8k
3 votes
0 answers
76 views

Embedding powers of a subshift into full shifts

Let $X$ be a subshift over a finitely generated group $G$. Let $K(X)$ denote the smallest cardinality of any alphabet $A$ such that $X$ embeds (continuously and $G$-equivariantly) into $A^G$. For ...
David Cohen's user avatar
5 votes
1 answer
169 views

Furstenberg decomposition for non-compact spaces

Given a topological group $G$, a $G$-space is a topological space $X$ equipped with an action of $G$, such that the map $(g,x) \mapsto g.x$ is continuous. The action is distal if no non-diagonal ...
Colin Reid's user avatar
  • 4,728
4 votes
1 answer
332 views

Kac's lemma for amenable group actions

The classical Kac's lemma says the following. Let $(X,\mu)$ be a probability space and $T$ a measure preserving transformation. Assume $A\subset X$ has positive measure. Then $$\sum_{k\ge 1} k\mu(A_k)...
apvelozo's user avatar
2 votes
0 answers
62 views

Codistal subgroups of locally compact groups

Let $G$ be a topological group and let $H$ be a closed subgroup of $G$. Say $H$ is codistal in $G$ if the translation action of $G$ on the coset space $G/H$ is distal (meaning that no non-diagonal ...
Colin Reid's user avatar
  • 4,728
1 vote
0 answers
172 views

Generalizing approximate $\mathbb{Z}$-equivariance of a simple function

Let $f(x) := x^2 + (1-x^2)x$ and $F(x) := \log \frac{x}{1-x}-\frac{1}{x}$. It can be shown (cf. https://math.stackexchange.com/questions/1865370/) that $F$ is approximately equivariant w/r/t the $\...
Steve Huntsman's user avatar
11 votes
1 answer
925 views

About positive upper density

For $S\subset \mathbb{N}$ define the upper density as $D^{\ast }(S)=\limsup_{n\rightarrow \infty }\frac{\left\vert S\cap \{1,2,\ldots,n\} \right\vert }{% \left\vert n\right\vert }.$ Question: ...
Ali  Barzanouni's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
189 views

Existence of an orbit of exponential growth for group acting on the real line

Let G be a non-abelian finitely generated subgroup of increasing homeomorphisms of the real line having a fixed point free element $h$ ($hx>x$ for all $x$ in the line). Is there a real number $a$ ...
alberto's user avatar
2 votes
0 answers
414 views

Mixed up by definitions of mildly mixing

Here are two setup where the notion of "mildly mixing" comes up: for representations and for group acting by measure preserving transformations (see definitions below). Since a natural class of ...
ARG's user avatar
  • 4,432
7 votes
0 answers
305 views

Generator of a $\bigoplus_{n=0}^\infty \mathbb{Z}/2\mathbb{Z}$-action

Let $T$ be a measure-preserving action of a group $G$ on a Lebesgue space $X$. That means that $T$ associates an automorphism (i.e. an invertible measure-preserving transformation) $T^g$ of $X$ to ...
Stéphane Laurent's user avatar
2 votes
0 answers
103 views

Distal actions on coset spaces

Let $H$ be a group acting by homeomorphisms on a Hausdorff space $X$. Say the action is distal if for all $(x,y) \in X \times X$, if the set $\{(hx,hy) \mid h \in H\}$ accumulates at a diagonal point ...
Colin Reid's user avatar
  • 4,728
3 votes
3 answers
129 views

Are there references for the properties of words formed in finite groups using L-systems? (In particular, the algae L-system.)

Let $G$ be a (finite) group, and $a, b \in G$ be any two elements. Consider the sequence defined by \begin{eqnarray*} s_0 &=& a, \\ s_1 &=& b, \text{and} \\ s_{n+2} &=& s_{n+1} ...
user avatar