At the turn of this century Durand, and Lagarias and Pleasants established
that key features of minimal subshifts (and their higher-dimensional analogues)
to be studied are linearly repetitive, repulsive and power free. Since then,
generalisations and extensions of these features, namely α-repetitive,
α-repulsive and α-finite (α≥1), have been introduced
and studied. We establish the equivalence of α-repulsive and
α-finite for general subshifts over finite alphabets. Further, we
studied a family of aperiodic minimal subshifts stemming from Grigorchuk's
infinite 2-group G. In particular, we show that these subshifts provide
examples that demonstrate α-repulsive (and hence α-finite) is not
equivalent to α-repetitive, for α>1. We also give necessary and
sufficient conditions for these subshifts to be α-repetitive, and
α-repulsive (and hence α-finite). Moreover, we obtain an explicit
formula for their complexity functions from which we deduce that they are
uniquely ergodic.Comment: 15 page