63 research outputs found

    Random conformal dynamical systems

    Full text link
    We consider random dynamical systems such as groups of conformal transformations with a probability measure, or transversaly conformal foliations with a Laplace operator along the leaves, in which case we consider the holonomy pseudo-group. We prove that either there exists a measure invariant under all the elements of the group (or the pseudo-group), or almost surely a long composition of maps contracts exponentially a ball. We deduce some results about the unique ergodicity.Comment: 61 page

    Ribbon graphs and bialgebra of Lagrangian subspaces

    Full text link
    To each ribbon graph we assign a so-called L-space, which is a Lagrangian subspace in an even-dimensional vector space with the standard symplectic form. This invariant generalizes the notion of the intersection matrix of a chord diagram. Moreover, the actions of Morse perestroikas (or taking a partial dual) and Vassiliev moves on ribbon graphs are reinterpreted nicely in the language of L-spaces, becoming changes of bases in this vector space. Finally, we define a bialgebra structure on the span of L-spaces, which is analogous to the 4-bialgebra structure on chord diagrams.Comment: 21 pages, 13 figures. v2: major revision, Sec 2 and 3 completely rewritten; v3: minor corrections. Final version, to appear in Journal of Knot Theory and its Ramification

    Nonwandering sets of interval skew products

    Full text link
    In this paper we consider a class of skew products over transitive subshifts of finite type with interval fibers. For a natural class of 1-parameter families we prove that for all but countably many parameter values the nonwandering set (in particular, the union of all attractors and repellers) has zero measure. As a consequence, the same holds for a residual subset of the space of skew products.Comment: 8 pages. To appear in Nonlinearit

    A counterexample to the Cantelli conjecture through the Skorokhod embedding problem

    Full text link
    In this paper, we construct a counterexample to a question by Cantelli, asking whether there exists a nonconstant positive measurable function φ\varphi such that for i.i.d. r.v. X,YX,Y of law N(0,1)\mathcal{N}(0,1), the r.v. X+φ(X)⋅YX+\varphi(X)\cdot Y is also Gaussian. This construction is made by finding an unusual solution to the Skorokhod embedding problem (showing that the corresponding Brownian transport, contrary to the Root barrier, is not unique). To find it, we establish some sufficient conditions for the continuity of the Root barrier function.Comment: Published at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/14-AOP932 in the Annals of Probability (http://www.imstat.org/aop/) by the Institute of Mathematical Statistics (http://www.imstat.org

    Stationary random metrics on hierarchical graphs via (min⁥,+)(\min,+)-type recursive distributional equations

    Full text link
    This paper is inspired by the problem of understanding in a mathematical sense the Liouville quantum gravity on surfaces. Here we show how to define a stationary random metric on self-similar spaces which are the limit of nice finite graphs: these are the so-called hierarchical graphs. They possess a well-defined level structure and any level is built using a simple recursion. Stopping the construction at any finite level, we have a discrete random metric space when we set the edges to have random length (using a multiplicative cascade with fixed law mm). We introduce a tool, the cut-off process, by means of which one finds that renormalizing the sequence of metrics by an exponential factor, they converge in law to a non-trivial metric on the limit space. Such limit law is stationary, in the sense that glueing together a certain number of copies of the random limit space, according to the combinatorics of the brick graph, the obtained random metric has the same law when rescaled by a random factor of law mm. In other words, the stationary random metric is the solution of a distributional equation. When the measure mm has continuous positive density on R+\mathbf{R}_+, the stationary law is unique up to rescaling and any other distribution tends to a rescaled stationary law under the iterations of the hierarchical transformation. We also investigate topological and geometric properties of the random space when mm is log⁥\log-normal, detecting a phase transition influenced by the branching random walk associated to the multiplicative cascade.Comment: 75 pages, 16 figures. This is a substantial improvement of the first version: title changed (formerly "Quantum gravity and (min,+)-type recursive distributional equations"), the presentation has been restyled and new main results adde

    Physical measures for nonlinear random walks on interval

    Full text link
    A one-dimensional confined Nonlinear Random Walk is a tuple of NN diffeomorphisms of the unit interval driven by a probabilistic Markov chain. For generic such walks, we obtain a geometric characterization of their ergodic stationary measures and prove that all of them have negative Lyapunov exponents. These measures appear to be probabilistic manifestations of physical measures for certain deterministic dynamical systems. These systems are step skew products over transitive subshifts of finite type (topological Markov chains) with the unit interval fiber. For such skew products, we show there exist only finite collection of alternating attractors and repellers; we also give a sharp upper bound for their number. Each of them is a graph of a continuous map from the base to the fiber defined almost everywhere w.r.t. any ergodic Markov measure in the base. The orbits starting between the adjacent attractor and repeller tend to the attractor as t→+∞t \to +\infty, and to the repeller as t→−∞t \to -\infty. The attractors support ergodic hyperbolic physical measures.Comment: 29 pages. Corrected a few typos and the title. To appear in Moscow Mathematical Journa

    Non-stationary version of Furstenberg Theorem on random matrix products

    Full text link
    We prove a non-stationary analog of the Furstenberg Theorem on random matrix products (that can be considered as a matrix version of the law of large numbers). Namely, under a suitable genericity conditions the sequence of norms of random products of independent but not necessarily identically distributed \SL(d, \mathbb{R}) matrices grow exponentially fast, and there exists a non-random sequence that almost surely describes asymptotical behaviour of that sequence.Comment: 33 page
    • 

    corecore