Billiards in ideal hyperbolic polygons (Q632346)

From MaRDI portal
scientific article
Language Label Description Also known as
English
Billiards in ideal hyperbolic polygons
scientific article

    Statements

    Billiards in ideal hyperbolic polygons (English)
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    15 March 2011
    0 references
    Given a polygon of the hyperbolic plane with ideal vertices, the paper under review considers billiards in ideal hyperbolic polygons. The authors state a nice conjecture about minimal average lengths of cyclically related trajectories and prove it in some cases using elementary arguments. It is proved that a trajectory is uniquely determined by the bi-infinite sequence of sides of the polygons that encounters the trajectory. The first main result characterizes which sequences code a trajectory. This characterization was already proved by \textit{M.-J. Giannoni} and \textit{D. Ullmo} in [Physica D 41, No. 3, 371--390 (1990; Zbl 0703.58039)], though a different geometric proof is provided here. Two periodic trajectories are cyclically related if their sequences of sides are related by a cyclic permutation. Notice that this is not the usual shift in dynamics that gives the same periodic trajectory. The average length of a periodic trajectory is the average of the lengths of all cyclically related periodic trajectories. The following conjecture is stated in the paper: for any periodic trajectory, the average length is uniquely minimized by the regular ideal hyperbolic polygon. This is a beautiful characterization of the regular polygon in the moduli space of ideal polygons (that is a cell of dimension \(n-3\), where \(n\) denotes the number of vertices). Some cases of this conjecture are proved in the paper using elementary and nice arguments of hyperbolic trigonometry, Möbius transformations and symmetry.
    0 references
    0 references
    billiards
    0 references
    hyperbolic polygons
    0 references
    periodic trajectories
    0 references

    Identifiers