Integrable and Chaotic Systems Associated with Fractal Groups

Fractal groups (also called self-similar groups) is the class of groups discovered by the first author in the 1980s with the purpose of solving some famous problems in mathematics, including the question of raising to von Neumann about non-elementary amenability (in the association with studies arou...

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Main Authors: Rostislav Grigorchuk, Supun Samarakoon
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-02-01
Series:Entropy
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/1099-4300/23/2/237
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spelling doaj-cc846b145b8e46238655432344d3237b2021-02-19T00:02:41ZengMDPI AGEntropy1099-43002021-02-012323723710.3390/e23020237Integrable and Chaotic Systems Associated with Fractal GroupsRostislav Grigorchuk0Supun Samarakoon1Department of Mathematics, Texas A&M University, College Station, TX 77843, USADepartment of Mathematics, Texas A&M University, College Station, TX 77843, USAFractal groups (also called self-similar groups) is the class of groups discovered by the first author in the 1980s with the purpose of solving some famous problems in mathematics, including the question of raising to von Neumann about non-elementary amenability (in the association with studies around the Banach-Tarski Paradox) and John Milnor’s question on the existence of groups of intermediate growth between polynomial and exponential. Fractal groups arise in various fields of mathematics, including the theory of random walks, holomorphic dynamics, automata theory, operator algebras, etc. They have relations to the theory of chaos, quasi-crystals, fractals, and random Schrödinger operators. One important development is the relation of fractal groups to multi-dimensional dynamics, the theory of joint spectrum of pencil of operators, and the spectral theory of Laplace operator on graphs. This paper gives a quick access to these topics, provides calculation and analysis of multi-dimensional rational maps arising via the Schur complement in some important examples, including the first group of intermediate growth and its overgroup, contains a discussion of the dichotomy “integrable-chaotic” in the considered model, and suggests a possible probabilistic approach to studying the discussed problems.https://www.mdpi.com/1099-4300/23/2/237fractal groupself-similar grouprational mapMealy automatonamenable groupjoint spectrum
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Rostislav Grigorchuk
Supun Samarakoon
spellingShingle Rostislav Grigorchuk
Supun Samarakoon
Integrable and Chaotic Systems Associated with Fractal Groups
Entropy
fractal group
self-similar group
rational map
Mealy automaton
amenable group
joint spectrum
author_facet Rostislav Grigorchuk
Supun Samarakoon
author_sort Rostislav Grigorchuk
title Integrable and Chaotic Systems Associated with Fractal Groups
title_short Integrable and Chaotic Systems Associated with Fractal Groups
title_full Integrable and Chaotic Systems Associated with Fractal Groups
title_fullStr Integrable and Chaotic Systems Associated with Fractal Groups
title_full_unstemmed Integrable and Chaotic Systems Associated with Fractal Groups
title_sort integrable and chaotic systems associated with fractal groups
publisher MDPI AG
series Entropy
issn 1099-4300
publishDate 2021-02-01
description Fractal groups (also called self-similar groups) is the class of groups discovered by the first author in the 1980s with the purpose of solving some famous problems in mathematics, including the question of raising to von Neumann about non-elementary amenability (in the association with studies around the Banach-Tarski Paradox) and John Milnor’s question on the existence of groups of intermediate growth between polynomial and exponential. Fractal groups arise in various fields of mathematics, including the theory of random walks, holomorphic dynamics, automata theory, operator algebras, etc. They have relations to the theory of chaos, quasi-crystals, fractals, and random Schrödinger operators. One important development is the relation of fractal groups to multi-dimensional dynamics, the theory of joint spectrum of pencil of operators, and the spectral theory of Laplace operator on graphs. This paper gives a quick access to these topics, provides calculation and analysis of multi-dimensional rational maps arising via the Schur complement in some important examples, including the first group of intermediate growth and its overgroup, contains a discussion of the dichotomy “integrable-chaotic” in the considered model, and suggests a possible probabilistic approach to studying the discussed problems.
topic fractal group
self-similar group
rational map
Mealy automaton
amenable group
joint spectrum
url https://www.mdpi.com/1099-4300/23/2/237
work_keys_str_mv AT rostislavgrigorchuk integrableandchaoticsystemsassociatedwithfractalgroups
AT supunsamarakoon integrableandchaoticsystemsassociatedwithfractalgroups
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