Quasiperiodic infinite words : multi-scale case and dynamical properties
Dynamical Systems
2007-05-23 v1 Combinatorics
Abstract
An infinite word x is said to be quasiperiodic if there exists a finite word q such that x is covered by occurrences of q (such a q is called a quasiperiod of x). Using the notion of derivation, we show that this definition is not sufficient to imply any symmetry in an infinite word. Therefore we introduce multi-scale quasiperiodic words, i.e. quasiperiodic words that admit an infinite number of quasiperiods. Such words are uniformly recurrent, this allows us to study the subshift they generate. We prove that multi-scale quasiperiodic subshifts are uniquely ergodic and have zero topological entropy as well as zero Kolmogorov complexity. Sturmian subshifts are shown to be multi-scale quasiperiodic.
Cite
@article{arxiv.math/0603354,
title = {Quasiperiodic infinite words : multi-scale case and dynamical properties},
author = {Thierry Monteil and Solomon Marcus},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:math/0603354},
year = {2007}
}
Comments
13 pages, 2 pictures