The construction of chaotic maps in the sense of Devaney on dendrites which commute to continuous maps on the unit interval (Q1884232)

From MaRDI portal
Revision as of 19:52, 28 July 2023 by Importer (talk | contribs) (‎Created a new Item)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
scientific article
Language Label Description Also known as
English
The construction of chaotic maps in the sense of Devaney on dendrites which commute to continuous maps on the unit interval
scientific article

    Statements

    The construction of chaotic maps in the sense of Devaney on dendrites which commute to continuous maps on the unit interval (English)
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    27 October 2004
    0 references
    Let \(f: I \to I\) be a continuous map from the unit interval \(I\) into itself. For a periodic orbit of \(p\) with a primitive period \(n\) we denote this orbit by \(P = \{p_0, \dots, p_{n-1}\}\) assuming that \(0 \leq p_0 < p_1 < \dots < p_{n-1} \leq 1\), i.e. \(p_i\) need not be equal to \(f(p_{i-1})\). Then \(S(I,P) = (p_0, p_1) \cup (p_1, p_2) \cup \dots \cup (p_{n-2},p_{n-1})\). The map \(f\) is said to be pointwise \(P-\)expansive if for any interval \((p_k,p_{k+1})\) there exists a positive integer \(l\) such that \((f^l(p_k),f^l(p_{k+1})) \cap P \neq \emptyset\). The first main theorem of the paper says that a continuous map \(f: I \to I\) has positive topological entropy if and only if there exists a periodic orbit \(P\) of \(f\) such that \(f\) is pointwise \(P\)-expansive. The second part of the paper is devoted to the semiconjugacy between a given continuous map and a suitably constructed map on a dendrite. A dendrite is a locally connected, uniquely arcwise continuum. For a continuous map \(f: I \to I\) and a periodic orbit \(P\) of \(f\) the authors construct the dendrite \(Z(f,P)\) and a continuous surjective map \(\pi: I \to Z(f,P)\). Also, a continuous map \(g: Z(f,P) \to Z(f,P)\) is constructed such that \(g\) is semiconjugate to \(f\), i.e. \(\pi \circ f = g \circ \pi\). The second main theorem of the paper says that if the period \(n\) of \(P\) is an odd number which is a prime or the supremum in the Sharkovsky ordering, then \(g\) is topologically mixing and chaotic in the sense of Devaney; moreover, \(g\) has positive topological entropy. Some other lemmas which lead to main theorems and some corollaries are presented. Several examples are also given.
    0 references
    chaotic map
    0 references
    topological entropy
    0 references
    pointwise \(P\)-expansivity
    0 references

    Identifiers

    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references