Topological entropy

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In mathematics, the topological entropy of a topological dynamical system is a nonnegative real number that measures the complexity of the system. Topological entropy was first introduced in 1965 by Adler, Konheim and McAndrew. Their definition was modelled after the definition of the Kolmogorov–Sinai, or metric, entropy. Later, Dinaburg and Rufus Bowen gave a different, equivalent definition reminiscent of the Hausdorff dimension. The second definition clarified the meaning of the topological entropy: for a system given by an iterated function, the topological entropy represents the exponential growth rate of the number of distinguishable orbits of the iterates. An important variational principle relates the notions of topological and measure-theoretic entropy.

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[edit] Definition

A topological dynamical system consists of a Hausdorff topological space X (usually assumed to be compact) and a continuous self-map f. Its topological entropy is a nonnegative real number that can be defined in various ways, which are known to be equivalent.

[edit] Definition of Adler, Konheim, and McAndrew

Let X be a compact Hausdorff topological space. For any finite cover C of X, let H(C) be the logarithm (usually to base 2) of the smallest number of elements of C that cover X. For two covers C and D, let

 C \vee D

be their (minimal) common refinement, which consists of all the non-empty intersections of a set from C with a set from D, and similarly for multiple covers. For any continuous map f: X → X, the following limit exists:

 H(C,f) = \lim_{n\to\infty}
\frac{1}{n} H(C\vee f^{-1}C\vee \ldots\vee f^{-n+1}C).

Then the topological entropy of f, denoted h(f), is defined to be the supremum of H(C, f) over all possible finite covers C.

[edit] Interpretation

The parts of C may be viewed as symbols that (partially) describe the position of a point x in X: all points xCi are assigned the symbol Ci . Imagine that the position of x is (imperfectly) measured by a certain device and that each part of C corresponds to one possible outcome of the measurement. The integer H(C\vee f^{-1}C\vee \ldots\vee f^{-n+1}C) then represents the minimal number of "words" of length n needed to encode the points of X according to the behavior of their first n − 1 iterates under f, or, put differently, the total number of "scenarios" of the behavior of these iterates, as "seen" by the partition C. Thus the topological entropy is the average (per iteration) amount of information needed to describe long iterations of the map f.

[edit] Definition of Bowen and Dinaburg

This definition uses a metric on X (actually, uniform structure would suffice). Let (X, d) be a compact metric space and f: X → X be a continuous map. For each natural number n, a new metric dn is defined on X by the formula

d_n(x,y)=\max\{d(f^i(x),f^i(y)): 0\leq i<n\}.

Given any ε > 0 and n ≥ 1, two points of X are ε-close with respect to this metric if their first n iterates are ε-close. This metric allows one to distinguish in a neighborhood of an orbit the points that move away from each other during the iteration from the points that travel together. A subset E of X is said to be (n, ε)-separated if each pair of distinct points of E is at least ε apart in the metric dn. Denote by N(n, ε) the maximum cardinality of an (n, ε)-separated set. The topological entropy of the map f is defined by

h(f)=\lim_{\epsilon\to 0} \left(\limsup_{n\to \infty} \frac{1}{n}\log N(n,\epsilon)\right).

[edit] Interpretation

Since X is compact, N(n, ε) is finite and represents the number of distinguishable orbit segments of length n, assuming that we cannot distinguish points within ε of one another. A straightforward argument shows that the limit defining h(f) always exists in the extended real line (but could be infinite). This limit may be interpreted as the measure of the average exponential growth of the number of distinguishable orbit segments. In this sense, it measures complexity of the topological dynamical system (X, f). Rufus Bowen extended this definition of topological entropy in a way which permits X to be noncompact.

[edit] See also

[edit] References


This article incorporates material from Topological Entropy on PlanetMath, which is licensed under the GFDL.

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