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Wednesday 31 Jan 2024From Sturmians to Random Substitutions

Tony Samuel - University of Birmingham

Harrison 106 14:30-15:30


Aperiodic sequences and sequence spaces form prototypical mathematical models of quasicrystals. The most quintessential examples include subshifts of Sturmian words and substitutions, which are ubiquitous objects in ergodic theory and aperiodic order.  Two of the most striking features these shift spaces have are that they have zero topological entropy and are uniquely ergodic.  Random substitutions are a generalisation of deterministic substitutions, and in stark contrast to their deterministic counterparts, subshifts of random substitutions often have positive topological entropy and exhibit uncountably many ergodic measures. Moreover, they have been shown to provide mathematical models for physical quasicrystals with defects.

We will begin by talking about subshifts generated by Sturmian words and ways to measure their complexity beyond topological entropy, and show how this measure of complexity can be used to build a classification via Jarník sets.  We will build a bridge between these aperiodic sequence spaces to random substitutions, and present some recent dynamical results concerning their measure theoretical entropy and ways to visualise them.  Namely, we will present a method to build a new class of Rauzy fractals.


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