English

Recognizability for sequences of morphisms

Dynamical Systems 2020-05-25 v2

Abstract

We investigate different notions of recognizability for a free monoid morphism σ:AB\sigma: \mathcal{A}^* \to \mathcal{B}^*. Full recognizability occurs when each (aperiodic) point in BZ\mathcal{B}^\mathbb{Z} admits at most one tiling with words σ(a)\sigma(a), aAa \in \mathcal{A}. This is stronger than the classical notion of recognizability of a substitution σ:AA\sigma: \mathcal{A}^*\to\mathcal{A}^*, where the tiling must be compatible with the language of the substitution. We show that if A=2|\mathcal A|=2, or if σ\sigma's incidence matrix has rank A|\mathcal A|, or if σ\sigma is permutative, then σ\sigma is fully recognizable. Next we investigate the classical notion of recognizability and improve earlier results of Moss\'{e} (1992) and Bezuglyi, Kwiatkowski and Medynets (2009), by showing that any substitution is recognizable for aperiodic points in its substitutive shift. Finally we define recognizability and also eventual recognizability for sequences of morphisms which define an SS-adic shift. We prove that a sequence of morphisms on alphabets of bounded size, such that compositions of consecutive morphisms are growing on all letters, is eventually recognizable for aperiodic points. We provide examples of eventually recognizable, but not recognizable, sequences of morphisms, and sequences of morphisms which are not eventually recognizable. As an application, for a recognizable sequence of morphisms, we obtain an almost everywhere bijective correspondence between the SS-adic shift it generates, and the measurable Bratteli-Vershik dynamical system that it defines.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1705.00167,
  title  = {Recognizability for sequences of morphisms},
  author = {Valérie Berthé and Wolfgang Steiner and Jörg Thuswaldner and Reem Yassawi},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1705.00167},
  year   = {2020}
}

Comments

Final version

R2 v1 2026-06-22T19:31:49.333Z