Spectral multiplicities of infinite measure preserving transformations
From MaRDI portal
Publication:366239
DOI10.1007/s10688-010-0021-2zbMath1271.28013arXiv0905.3486OpenAlexW2053768330MaRDI QIDQ366239
V. V. Ryzhikov, Alexandre I. Danilenko
Publication date: 12 September 2013
Published in: Functional Analysis and its Applications (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://arxiv.org/abs/0905.3486
Related Items (3)
New spectral multiplicities for mixing transformations ⋮ Weak closures of ergodic actions ⋮ A survey on spectral multiplicities of ergodic actions
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Ergodic measure preserving transformations with arbitrary finite spectral multiplicities
- A simple map with no prime factors
- The homogeneous spectrum problem in ergodic theory
- Transformations with highly nonhomogeneous spectrum of finite multiplicity
- Isometric extensions and multiple recurrence of infinite measure preserving systems
- Transformations having homogeneous spectra
- On ergodic transformations with homogeneous spectrum
- Rank-one power weakly mixing non-singular transformations
- Explicit solution of Rokhlin's problem on homogeneous spectrum and applications
- Weak limits of powers, simple spectrum of symmetric products, and rank-one mixing constructions
- Mixing with staircase multiplicity functions
- On new spectral multiplicities for ergodic maps
- On the multiplicity function of ergodic group extensions of rotations
- MULTIPLE AND POLYNOMIAL RECURRENCE FOR ABELIAN ACTIONS IN INFINITE MEASURE
- On the multiplicity function of ergodic group extensions, II
- Spectral multiplicities and asymptotic operator properties of actions with invariant measure
- Some new cases of realization of spectral multiplicity function for ergodic transformations
- Infinite measure preserving transformations with “mixing”
- Funny rank-one weak mixing for nonsingular Abelian actions
This page was built for publication: Spectral multiplicities of infinite measure preserving transformations