Hofbauer towers and inverse limit spaces (Q2846932)
From MaRDI portal
| This is the item page for this Wikibase entity, intended for internal use and editing purposes. Please use this page instead for the normal view: Hofbauer towers and inverse limit spaces |
scientific article; zbMATH DE number 6204574
| Language | Label | Description | Also known as |
|---|---|---|---|
| English | Hofbauer towers and inverse limit spaces |
scientific article; zbMATH DE number 6204574 |
Statements
Hofbauer towers and inverse limit spaces (English)
0 references
4 September 2013
0 references
Hofbauer tower
0 references
inverse limit spaces
0 references
kneading maps
0 references
endpoints
0 references
By a unimodal map \(f:[0,1]\to [0,1]\) is understood a continuous selfmap of \([0,1]\) such that there is a point \(c\in (0,1)\) with \(f|[0,c]\) strictly increasing and \(f|[c,1]\) strictly decreasing. Let \(c_i= f^i(c)\) for \(i\in\mathbb{N}\). It is assumed that \(c_2< c< c_1\), and \(c_2\leq c_3\). Let \(f^n\) be an iterate of \(f\) and \(J\) be a maximal subinterval for which \(c\in\partial J\) and \(f^n|J\) is monotone. If \(c\in f^n(J)\), then \(n\) is called a cutting time. These cutting times lead to the definition of a function \(Q_f:\mathbb{N}\to \mathbb{N}\cup\{0\}\), called the kneading map. Let \(I= [0,1]\) and \(f:I\to I\) be unimodal. Let \((I,f)\) denote the associated inverse limit space. A point \(x\in (I,f)\) is called an endpoint of \((I,f)\) if for every pair \(A\) and \(B\) of subcontinua of \((I,f)\) with \(x\in A\cap B\) either \(A\subset B\) or \(B\subset A\). Let \({\mathcal E}_f\) be the set NEWLINE\[NEWLINE\{(x_0,x_1,\dots)\in (I,f)\mid x_i\in \omega(c)\text{ for all }i\in \mathbb{N}\},NEWLINE\]NEWLINE where \(\omega(c)\) is the omega limit set of \(c\) under \(f\). As the main result, the author proves that if \(Q_f(k)\to\infty\) for \(k\to\infty\) and \(f|\omega(c)\) is one to one, then \({\mathcal E}_f\) is precisely the collection of endpoints of \((I,f)\).
0 references