Hostname: page-component-76fb5796d-r6qrq Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-25T11:27:48.616Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Textile systems and one-sided resolving automorphisms and endomorphisms of the shift

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 February 2008

MASAKAZU NASU*
Affiliation:
19-8, 9-chōme, Takaya-Takamigaoka, Higashi-Hiroshima 739-2115, Japan (email: nasu@quartz.ocn.ne.jp)

Abstract

Two results on textile systems are obtained. Using these we prove that for any automorphism φ of any topologically-transitive subshift of finite type, if φ is expansive and φ or φ−1 has memory zero or anticipation zero, then φ is topologically conjugate to a subshift of finite type. Moreover, this is generalized to a result on chain recurrent onto endomorphisms of topologically-transitive subshifts of finite type. Using textile systems and textile subsystems, we develop a structure theory concerning expansiveness with the pseudo orbit tracing property on directionally essentially weakly one-sided resolving automorphisms and endomorphisms of subshifts.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2007

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

[1]Akatsuka, K.. The 6-scope cellular automata whose global maps are bijective. Master’s Thesis, Mie University, Tsu, 1989(in Japanese).Google Scholar
[2]Aoki, N. and Hiraide, K.. Topological Theory of Dynamical Systems. North-Holland, Amsterdam, 1994.Google Scholar
[3]Ashley, J.. LR conjugacies of shifts of finite type are uniquely so. Symbolic Dynamics and its Applications (New Haven, CT, 1991) (Contemporary Mathematics, 135). American Mathematical Society, Providence, RI, 1992, pp. 5784.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
[4]Blanchard, F. and Maass, A.. Dynamical properties of expansive one-sided cellular automata. Israel J. Math. 99 (1997), 149174.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
[5]Blanchard, F. and Tisseur, P.. Some properties of cellular automata with equicontinuity points. Ann. Inst. H. Poincaré Probab. Statist. 36 (2000), 569582.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
[6]Boyle, M.. Some sofic shifts cannot commute with nonwandering shifts of finite type. Illinois J. Math. 48 (2004), 12671277.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
[7]Boyle, M., Fiebig, D. and Fiebig, U.. A dimension group for local homeomorphisms and endomorphisms of onesided shifts of finite type. J. Reine Angew. Math. 487 (1997), 2759.Google Scholar
[8]Boyle, M. and Kitchens, B.. Periodic points for onto cellular automata. Indag. Math. (N.S.) 10 (1999), 483493.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
[9]Boyle, M. and Krieger, W.. Periodic points and automorphisms of the shift. Trans. Amer. Math. Soc. 302 (1987), 125149.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
[10]Boyle, M. and Lee, B.. Jointly periodic points in cellular automata: computer explorations and conjectures. Experimental Math., to appear.Google Scholar
[11]Boyle, M. and Lind, D.. Expansive subdynamics. Trans. Amer. Math. Soc. 349 (1997), 55102.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
[12]Boyle, M. and Maass, A.. Expansive invertible onesided cellular automata. J. Math. Soc. Japan 52 (2000), 725740; J. Math. Soc. Japan 56 (2004), 309–310 (Erratum).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
[13]Fiebig, D.. Personal communication, 1996.Google Scholar
[14]Hedlund, G. A.. Endomorphisms and automorphisms of the shift dynamical system. Math. Systems Theory 3 (1969), 320375.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
[15]Kitchens, B.. Symbolic Dynamics, One-sided, Two-sided and Countable State Markov Chains. Springer, Berlin, 1998.Google Scholar
[16]K˚urka, P.. Languages, equicontinuity and attractors in cellular automata. Ergod. Th. & Dynam. Sys. 17 (1997), 417433.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
[17]Lind, D. and Marcus, B.. An Introduction to Symbolic Dynamics and Coding. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1995.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
[18]Nasu, M.. Local maps inducing surjective global maps of one-dimensional tessellation automata. Math. Systems Theory 11 (1978), 327351.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
[19]Nasu, M.. Uniformly finite-to-one and onto extensions of homomorphisms between strongly connected graphs. Discrete Math. 39 (1982), 171179.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
[20]Nasu, M.. Textile systems for endomorphisms and automorphisms of the shift. Mem. Amer. Math. Soc. 546 (1995).Google Scholar
[21]Nasu, M.. Maps in symbolic dynamics. Lecture Notes of The Tenth KAIST Mathematics Workshop 1995. Ed. G. H. Choe. Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology, Mathematics Research Center, Taejon, 1996.Google Scholar
[22]Nasu, M.. Endomorphisms of expansive systems on compact metric spaces and the pseudo-orbit tracing property. Trans. Amer. Math. Soc. 352 (2000), 47314757.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
[23]Nasu, M.. The dynamics of expansive invertible onesided cellular automata. Trans. Amer. Math. Soc. 354 (2002), 40674084.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
[24]Nasu, M.. Expansive automorphisms and expansive endomorphisms of the shift (a survey). Dynamics of Complex Systems (Kyoto, 2004) RIMS Kokyuroku (1404) (2004), 68–82.Google Scholar
[25]Nasu, M.. Nondegenerate q-biresolving textile systems and expansive automorphisms of onesided full shifts. Trans. Amer. Math. Soc. 358 (2006), 871891.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
[26]Reddy, W. L.. Lifting expansive homeomorphisms to symbolic flows. Math. Systems Theory 2 (1968), 9192.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
[27]Walters, P.. On the Pseudo-orbit Tracing Property and its Relation to Stability (Lecture Notes in Mathematics, 668). Springer, Berlin, 1978, pp. 231244.Google Scholar