For an ergodic system, the theorem of Shannon-McMillan-Breiman states that for every finite generating partition the exponential decay rate of the measure of cylinder sets equals the metric entropy almost everywhere. In 1962 Ibragimov showed that the distribution of the measure of cylinder sets is lognormally distributed provided the measure is strong mixing and its conditional entropy function is sufficiently well approximable.
Carleson (1958) and Chung (1960) generalised the theorem of SMB to infinite partitions (provided the entropy is finite). We show that the measures of cylinder sets are lognormally distributed for uniformly strong mixing systems and infinite partitions and show that the rate of convergence is polynomial. Apart from the mixing property we require that a higher than fourth moment of the information function is finite. Also, unlike previous results by Ibragimov and others which only apply to finite partitions, here we do not require any regularity of the conditional entropy function. We also obtain the law of the iterated logarithm and the weak invariance principle for the information function.
I will present some of the results by Marcy Barge and Jaroslaw Kwapisz (based on their paper "Geometric Theory of unimidular Pisot substitutions", Amer. J. Math., vol. 128 (2006), no. 5, pp. 1219--1282).
There are two classical ways of studying substitution tilings of the line: symbolic dynamics, and endomorphisms of ``train tracks". The authors give a strikingly new geometric approach and in particular show that if the tiling has a unimodular Pisot matrix of dimension d, then there is a factor onto the d-dimensional torus. In fact, they have a preprint removing the unimodular assumption. I propose to begin defining tilings and the tiling space X of a tiling T. X is a compact metric space that contains all tilings which have the same local patterns as T. In dimension 1 (the subject of this talk) X is similar to a solenoid.
I will not assume any familiarity with tiling theory.
In 1969, Hirsch posed the following problem: given a diffeomorphism of a manifold and a hyperbolic set for the diffeomorphism, describe the topology of the hyperbolic set and the dynamics of the diffeomorphism for this set. We solve the problem when the hyperbolic set is a closed 3-manifold.