Badly approximable points on planar curves and winning
From MaRDI portal
Publication:1684659
DOI10.1016/j.aim.2017.11.009zbMath1454.11133arXiv1409.0064OpenAlexW2964216256MaRDI QIDQ1684659
Jinpeng An, Victor V. Beresnevich, Sanju L. Velani
Publication date: 12 December 2017
Published in: Advances in Mathematics (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://arxiv.org/abs/1409.0064
Simultaneous homogeneous approximation, linear forms (11J13) Metric theory (11J83) Diophantine approximation in probabilistic number theory (11K60)
Related Items
Number theory meets wireless communications: an introduction for dummies like us ⋮ A characterization of bad approximability ⋮ Badly approximable points on manifolds ⋮ A NOTE ON BADLY APPROXIMABLE LINEAR FORMS ON MANIFOLDS ⋮ Bounded and divergent trajectories and expanding curves on homogeneous spaces ⋮ Invariant measures for solvable groups and Diophantine approximation ⋮ Diophantine approximation in Kleinian groups: singular, extremal, and bad limit points ⋮ \(\mathbf{Bad(w)}\) is hyperplane absolute winning ⋮ Badly approximable points on manifolds and unipotent orbits in homogeneous spaces ⋮ Bounded orbits of diagonalizable flows on finite volume quotients of products of \(\mathrm{SL}_2(\mathbb{R})\) ⋮ Winning property of badly approximable points on curves
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- 2-dimensional badly approximable vectors and Schmidt's game
- On a problem in simultaneous Diophantine approximation: Schmidt's conjecture
- Badly approximable points on manifolds
- A note on simultaneous Diophantine approximation on planar curves
- Badly approximable points on planar curves and a problem of Davenport
- A note on three problems in metric Diophantine approximation
- Badly approximable systems of affine forms, fractals, and Schmidt games
- On Simultaneously Badly Approximable Numbers
- Bad(s,t) is hyperplane absolute winning
- Badziahin-Pollington-Velani's theorem and Schmidt's game
- Metrical Theorems on Fractional Parts of Sequences
- On Badly Approximable Numbers and Certain Games
- A note on Diophantine approximation (II)