On the ergodicity of flat surfaces of finite area (Q2453454)

From MaRDI portal
Revision as of 23:47, 2 February 2024 by Import240129110113 (talk | contribs) (Added link to MaRDI item.)
scientific article
Language Label Description Also known as
English
On the ergodicity of flat surfaces of finite area
scientific article

    Statements

    On the ergodicity of flat surfaces of finite area (English)
    0 references
    0 references
    6 June 2014
    0 references
    This paper presents an elegant sufficient condition for ergodicity of the straight line flow on a translation surface of finite area (but possibly infinite type) in terms of the evolution of the surface under the renormalization dynamics of the Teichmüller geodesic flow. Let \((S, \alpha)\) be a translation surface of finite area, and let \((S_t, \alpha_t)\) denote its evolution under the Teichmüller geodesic flow, which is obtained by stretching the surface by \(e^t\) horizontally and contracting by \(e^{-t}\) vertically. Masur showed in the case of finite-type surfaces, that if the systole \(\delta_t\) of \((S_t, \alpha_t)\) (i.e., the length of the shortest homotopically non-trivial curve on \((S_t, \alpha_t)\)) is bounded below along a sequence of times \(t_n \rightarrow \infty)\), then the vertical flow on \((S, \alpha)\) is uniquely ergodic. Theorem 2 of the paper, the main result, states a similar non-divergence criterion for ergodicity in the general setting of finite area surfaces. Namely, let \(\mathrm{SL}(S, \alpha)\) denote the stabilizer of the surface under the linear action of \(\mathrm{SL}(2, \mathbb R)\) on the moduli space of translation surfaces. Then if the trajectory \((S_t, \alpha_t)\) does not leave every compact set of \(\mathrm{SL}(2,\mathbb R)/\mathrm{SL}(S, \alpha)\), the vertical flow on \((S, \alpha)\) is ergodic. In Theorem 3, a striking generalization of Masur's criterion for unique ergodicity is presented: Suppose \((S, \alpha)\) is compact, and \[ \int_{0}^{\infty} \delta_t^2 dt = \infty. \] Then the vertical flow on \((S, \alpha)\) is uniquely ergodic.
    0 references
    flat surface
    0 references
    ergodicity
    0 references
    saddle connection
    0 references
    systole
    0 references

    Identifiers

    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references