scholarly journals Symbolic dynamics for the geodesic flow on Hecke surfaces

2008 ◽  
Vol 2 (4) ◽  
pp. 581-627 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dieter Mayer ◽  
◽  
Fredrik Strömberg ◽  
1981 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 107-133 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mary Rees

AbstractThis paper concerns a problem which arose from a paper of Sullivan. Let Γ be a discrete group of isometries of hyperbolic space Hd+1. We study the question of when the geodesic flow on the unit tangent bundle UT (Hd+1/Γ) of Hd+1/Γ is ergodic with respect to certain natural measures. As a consequence, we study the question of when Γ is of divergence type. Ergodicity when the non-wandering set of UT (Hd+1/Γ) is compact is already known from the theory of symbolic dynamics, due to Bowen, or from Sullivan's work. For such a Γ, we consider a subgroup Γ1 of Γ with Γ/Γ1 ≅ℤυ and prove the geodesic flow on UT (Hd+1/Γ1) is ergodic (with respect to one of these natural measures) if and only if υ ≤ 2.


1996 ◽  
Vol 16 (6) ◽  
pp. 1241-1274 ◽  
Author(s):  
Karlheinz Gröchenig ◽  
Andrew Haas

AbstractWe develop a new type of backward continued fractions that can be associated to each Hecke-type group. We study its symbolic dynamics, and the corresponding interval maps and their invariant measures. These measures are infinite if and only if the corresponding groups are discrete. For the discrete Hecke groups the invariant measure is computed explicitly by studying the geodesic flow on the associated Riemann surface.


Methodology ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 7 (3) ◽  
pp. 88-95 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jose A. Martínez ◽  
Manuel Ruiz Marín

The aim of this study is to improve measurement in marketing research by constructing a new, simple, nonparametric, consistent, and powerful test to study scale invariance. The test is called D-test. D-test is constructed using symbolic dynamics and symbolic entropy as a measure of the difference between the response patterns which comes from two measurement scales. We also give a standard asymptotic distribution of our statistic. Given that the test is based on entropy measures, it avoids smoothed nonparametric estimation. We applied D-test to a real marketing research to study if scale invariance holds when measuring service quality in a sports service. We considered a free-scale as a reference scale and then we compared it with three widely used rating scales: Likert-type scale from 1 to 5 and from 1 to 7, and semantic-differential scale from −3 to +3. Scale invariance holds for the two latter scales. This test overcomes the shortcomings of other procedures for analyzing scale invariance; and it provides researchers a tool to decide the appropriate rating scale to study specific marketing problems, and how the results of prior studies can be questioned.


Author(s):  
Jean-Michel Bismut

This book uses the hypoelliptic Laplacian to evaluate semisimple orbital integrals in a formalism that unifies index theory and the trace formula. The hypoelliptic Laplacian is a family of operators that is supposed to interpolate between the ordinary Laplacian and the geodesic flow. It is essentially the weighted sum of a harmonic oscillator along the fiber of the tangent bundle, and of the generator of the geodesic flow. In this book, semisimple orbital integrals associated with the heat kernel of the Casimir operator are shown to be invariant under a suitable hypoelliptic deformation, which is constructed using the Dirac operator of Kostant. Their explicit evaluation is obtained by localization on geodesics in the symmetric space, in a formula closely related to the Atiyah-Bott fixed point formulas. Orbital integrals associated with the wave kernel are also computed. Estimates on the hypoelliptic heat kernel play a key role in the proofs, and are obtained by combining analytic, geometric, and probabilistic techniques. Analytic techniques emphasize the wavelike aspects of the hypoelliptic heat kernel, while geometrical considerations are needed to obtain proper control of the hypoelliptic heat kernel, especially in the localization process near the geodesics. Probabilistic techniques are especially relevant, because underlying the hypoelliptic deformation is a deformation of dynamical systems on the symmetric space, which interpolates between Brownian motion and the geodesic flow. The Malliavin calculus is used at critical stages of the proof.


2021 ◽  
pp. 003802612110063
Author(s):  
Steven Threadgold ◽  
David Farrugia ◽  
Julia Coffey

This article contributes to recent debates about the relationship between affective labour and class by exploring the classed distinctions enacted through affective labour in the urban night-time economy. Bringing theories of affective labour into a dialogue with Bourdieusian feminist analysis, the article explores the affective and symbolic dynamics of hospitality labour in a gentrified inner-urban neighbourhood of Melbourne, Australia. It shows how the practice of hospitality labour enacts classed distinctions and tensions emerging from the gentrification of inner-urban areas, and how the aesthetic and symbolic dimensions of class contribute to the valorisation of affect in hospitality venues. The valorisation of affect are processes in which the value attributed to an atmosphere or consumption experience is based on the forms of distinction practised within the venue, enacted in aesthetics, tastes and modes of embodiment. The article also shows how practices of class distinction – both ‘punching up’ and ‘managing down’ – are connected to the gendered politics of service work in the way that workers manage the threat of violence or sexual harassment in venues. In general, the article shows how the classed dynamics of gentrification are enacted in affective economies, and therefore how Bourdieusian analysis of class can be usefully deployed in theoretical debates about affective labour.


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