First return maps of random maps and invariant measures
From MaRDI portal
Publication:4972336
DOI10.1088/1361-6544/AB4C83zbMath1432.37079OpenAlexW2991053082MaRDI QIDQ4972336
Publication date: 25 November 2019
Published in: Nonlinearity (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1088/1361-6544/ab4c83
random dynamical systemsabsolutely continuous invariant measuresindifferent fixed pointsfirst return maps
Dynamical aspects of measure-preserving transformations (37A05) Random measures (60G57) Generation, random and stochastic difference and differential equations (37H10) Dynamical systems involving maps of the interval (37E05) Random iteration (37H12)
Related Items (3)
Arcsine and Darling–Kac laws for piecewise linear random interval maps ⋮ On the existence of a σ-finite acim for a random iteration of intermittent Markov maps with uniformly contractive part ⋮ Matching for random systems with an application to minimal weight expansions
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Distance expanding random mappings, thermodynamical formalism, Gibbs measures and fractal geometry
- Transformations on [0,1 with infinite invariant measures]
- Random iteration of one-dimensional transformations
- First return map and invariant measures
- Estimates of the invariant densities of endomorphisms with indifferent fixed points
- Weakly attracting repellors for piecewise convex maps
- Chaos, fractals, and noise: Stochastic aspects of dynamics.
- Absolutely continuous invariant measures for random maps with position dependent probabilities
- Decay of correlation for random intermittent maps
- Invariant measures for position dependent random maps with continuous random parameters
- Invariant Densities for Random Maps of the Interval
- Asymptotic stability of densities for piecewise convex maps
- On the Existence of Invariant Measures for Piecewise Monotonic Transformations
- Position dependent random maps in one and higher dimensions
This page was built for publication: First return maps of random maps and invariant measures