Interval exchange transformation
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In mathematics, an interval exchange transformation[1] is a kind of dynamical system that generalises circle rotation. The phase space consists of the unit interval, and the transformation acts by cutting the interval into several subintervals, and then permuting these subintervals.
Formal definition
Let and let
be a permutation on
. Consider a vector
of positive real numbers (the widths of the subintervals), satisfying
Define a map called the interval exchange transformation associated to the pair
as follows. For
let
Then for , define
if lies in the subinterval
. Thus
acts on each subinterval of the form
by a translation, and it rearranges these subintervals so that the subinterval at position
is moved to position
.
Properties
Any interval exchange transformation is a bijection of
to itself preserves the Lebesgue measure. It is continuous except at a finite number of points.
The inverse of the interval exchange transformation is again an interval exchange transformation. In fact, it is the transformation
where
for all
.
If and
(in cycle notation), and if we join up the ends of the interval to make a circle, then
is just a circle rotation. The Weyl equidistribution theorem then asserts that if the length
is irrational, then
is uniquely ergodic. Roughly speaking, this means that the orbits of points of
are uniformly evenly distributed. On the other hand, if
is rational then each point of the interval is periodic, and the period is the denominator of
(written in lowest terms).
If , and provided
satisfies certain non-degeneracy conditions (namely there is no integer
such that
), a deep theorem which was a conjecture of M.Keane and due independently to William A. Veech[2] and to Howard Masur [3] asserts that for almost all choices of
in the unit simplex
the interval exchange transformation
is again uniquely ergodic. However, for
there also exist choices of
so that
is ergodic but not uniquely ergodic. Even in these cases, the number of ergodic invariant measures of
is finite, and is at most
.
Generalizations
Two and higher-dimensional generalizations include polygon exchanges, polyhedral exchanges and piecewise isometries.[4]
Notes
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References
- Artur Avila and Giovanni Forni, Weak mixing for interval exchange transformations and translation flows, arXiv:math/0406326v1, http://arxiv.org/abs/math.DS/0406326
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- ↑ Piecewise isometries – an emerging area of dynamical systems, Arek Goetz