Diophantine Approximation, Fractal Geometry and Related topics / Approximation diophantienne, géométrie fractale et sujets connexes
de
lundi 3 juin 2024 (08:50)
à
vendredi 7 juin 2024 (17:30)
lundi 3 juin 2024
08:50
Registration
Registration
08:50 - 09:20
Room: Auditorium Maurice GROSS
09:20
Mot de bienvenue / Welcoming
Mot de bienvenue / Welcoming
09:20 - 09:30
Room: Auditorium Maurice GROSS
09:30
Victor Beresnevich
Victor Beresnevich
09:30 - 10:30
Room: Auditorium Maurice GROSS
Khintchine’s Theorem - one hundred years on! Khintchine’s Theorem (1924) on rational approximations to real numbers is one of the most beautiful applications of the Borel-Cantelli lemma outside of probability theory. In this talk I will discuss problems and progress concerning inhomogeneous generalisations of this classical result, including the Duffin-Schaeffer Conjecture in the inhomogeneous setting. This is a joint work with Manuel Hauke and Sanju Velani.
10:30
Pause Café / Coffee Break
Pause Café / Coffee Break
10:30 - 11:00
Room: 0B120
11:00
Sam Chow
Sam Chow
11:00 - 11:30
Room: Auditorium Maurice GROSS
Multiplicative approximation on hypersurfaces Diophantine approximation on manifolds has been a major theme for many decades and has seen remarkable recent progress. I discuss joint work in preparation with Han Yu on the multiplicative analogue.
11:30
Pause / Break
Pause / Break
11:30 - 11:40
Room: 0B120
11:40
Evgeniy Zorin
Evgeniy Zorin
11:40 - 12:10
Room: Auditorium Maurice GROSS
Exploring the Limits: Unbounded Diophantine Approx- imations and Matrix Transformations In this talk, I will present our recent advancements on the shrinking target problem of matrix transformation on tori and their subvarieties. For tori, we can provide sharp asymptotic results in a remarkably broad setting. This research has been naturally linked with expansion of the Mass Transference Principle to unbounded conditions, a tool which holds an independent interest on its own. I will present the progress in this direction as well. In a much more refined case of subvarieties of tori, our findings are (yet) less sharp. So far, we have established the Khintchine theorem for curves in a two-dimensional torus and a Jarník-type theorem for straight lines (the latter result is conditional under abc-conjecture for high exponents of approximations). The latter topic clearly leads to a very interesting, rich and fascinating theory. Joint project with W. Baowei, B. Li, L. Liao, and S. Velani.
14:10
Nikolay Moshchevitin
Nikolay Moshchevitin
14:10 - 15:10
Room: Auditorium Maurice GROSS
Inhomogeneous approximation revisited We will discuss classical and modern results related to linear inhomogeneous Diophantine approximation. We recall the history of the problem from Kronecker’s approximation theorem, transference theory developed by Khintchine, Jarník and Cassels to recent results concerning grids of lattices. In particular we explain a new theory of k-divergence lattices which was introduced recently by U. Shapira and discuss the results of our recent paper N. Moshchevitin, A. Rao, U. Shapira ”Badly approximable grids and k-divergent lattices”, arXiv:2402.00196.
15:10
Pause / Break
Pause / Break
15:10 - 15:20
Room: 0B120
15:20
Reynold Fregoli
Reynold Fregoli
15:20 - 15:50
Room: Auditorium Maurice GROSS
Improvements to Dirichlet’s Theorem in the multiplicative setup and equidistribution of averages along curves In this talk, I will discuss uniform approximation by rationals vectors in the multiplicative set-up. Curiously enough, in this context, Dirichlet’s Theorem is improvable, and, for m × n matrices the correct constant is bounded above by 2−m+1. One can also show that almost all matrices are uniformly approximable by the function x−1(logx)−1+ε for any ε > 0. This emerges from the study of certain measures defined by averaging along particular curves the action of the full diagonal group on the space of (m + n)-dimensional unimodular lattices. The talk is based on a joint work with P. Bandi and D. Kleinbock.
15:50
Pause Café / Coffee Break
Pause Café / Coffee Break
15:50 - 16:20
Room: 0B120
16:20
Steven Robertson
Steven Robertson
16:20 - 16:50
Room: Auditorium Maurice GROSS
A Combinatorial Approach to the p(t)-adic Littlewood Conjecture Let p be a prime and let p(t) be an irreducible polynomial with coefficients in a field K. In 2004, de Mathan and Teuli ́e stated the p-adic Littlewood conjecture (p-LC) in analogy to the classical Littlewood conjecture. This talk focuses on the analogue of p-LC over the field of formal Laurent series with coefficients in K, known as the p(t)-adic Littlewood conjecture (p(t)-LC). Specifically, two metric results are provided on p(t)-LC with an additional growth function f. The first - a Khintchine- type theorem for p(t)-adic multiplicative approximation - enables one to determine the measure of the set of counterexamples to p(t)-LC for any choice of f. The second complements this by showing that the Hausdorff dimension of the same set is maximal when p(t) = t in the critical case where f = log2. These statements are proved by developing a dictionary between Diophantine approximation in function fields and the so-called number wall of a sequence - an infinite array containing the determinant of every finite Toeplitz matrix generated by that sequence. This unique methodology provides a complementary approach to the classical strategies used to attack a problem in Diophantine approximation: namely, Ergodic Theory and Number Theory.
16:50
Pause / Break
Pause / Break
16:50 - 17:00
Room: 0B120
17:00
Niclas Technau
Niclas Technau
17:00 - 17:30
Room: Auditorium Maurice GROSS
Counting Rational Points Near Manifolds Choose your favourite, compact manifold M. How many rational points, with denominator of bounded size, are near M? We report on joint work with Damaris Schindler and Rajula Srivastava addressing this question. Our new method reveals an intriguing interplay between number theory, harmonic analysis, and homogeneous dynamics.
mardi 4 juin 2024
09:30
Barak Weiss
Barak Weiss
09:30 - 10:30
Room: Auditorium Maurice GROSS
Singular vectors in manifolds, countable intersections, and Dirichlet spectrum A vector x = (x1, ..., xd) in Rd is totally irrational if 1, x1, ..., xd are linearly independent over rationals, and singular if for any ε > 0, for all large enough T, there are solutions p in Zd and q in {1, ..., T } to the inequality ∥qx − p∥ < εT −1/d. In previous work we showed that certain smooth manifolds of dimension at least two, and certain fractals, contain totally irrational singular vectors. The argument for proving this is a variation on an old argument employed by Khintchine and Jarn ́ık. We now adapt this argument to show that for certain families of maps fi : Rd → Rni , certain manifolds contain points x such that fi(x) is a singular vector for all i. This countable intersection property is motivated by some problems in approximation of vectors by vectors with coefficients in a number field. I will review Khintchine’s original argument and present additional consequences, among them that the Dirichlet spectrum is full, for arbitrary norms, in dimension d > 1, and improved rates of singularity on certain manifolds. Based on a joint work with Dmitry Kleinbock, Nikolaus Moshchevitin and Jacqueline Warren, and another joint work with Alon Agin.
10:30
Pause Café / Coffee Break
Pause Café / Coffee Break
10:30 - 11:00
Room: 0B120
11:00
Noy Soffer Aranov
Noy Soffer Aranov
11:00 - 11:30
Room: Auditorium Maurice GROSS
Hausdorff Dimension of the Set of Singular and Dirichlet Improvable Vectors in Function Fields. We compute the Hausdorff dimension of the set of singular vectors in function fields and bound the Hausdorff dimension of the Dirichlet improvable vectors in this setting. Our results are a function field analog of the results of Cheung and Chevallier. This is part of joint work with Taehyeong Kim.
11:30
Pause / Break
Pause / Break
11:30 - 11:40
Room: 0B120
11:40
Erez Nesharim
Erez Nesharim
11:40 - 12:10
Room: Auditorium Maurice GROSS
The Thue-Morse sequence has partial escape of mass over F2((1/t)) Every Laurent series in the field Fq ((1/t)) has a continued fraction expansion whose digits are polynomials. De-Mathan and Teulie proved that the degrees of the partial quotients of the left shifts of every quadratic Laurent series are unbounded. Shapira and Paulin improved this by showing that, in fact, a positive proportion of the degrees are bigger than any bound. We show that their result is best possible in the following sense: For the Laurent series over mathbbF2((1/t)) whose sequence of coefficients is the Thue-Morse sequence, this proportion is strictly less than 1. This talk is based on a work in progress with Uri Shapira and Noy Soffer-Aranov.
14:10
Damien Roy
Damien Roy
14:10 - 15:10
Room: Auditorium Maurice GROSS
Parametric geometry of numbers and simultaneous approximation to geometric progressions An important problem in Diophantine approximation is to determine, for a given positive integer n, the supremum λn of the exponents λn(ξ) of uniform simultaneous rational approximation to geometric progressions (1, ξ, ξ2, . . . , ξn) whose ratio ξ is either a transcendental real number or an algebraic real number of degree > n. In 1969, Davenport and Schmidt provided an upper bound on λn and, via geometry of numbers, they deduced a corresponding lower bound on the exponent of best approximation to such ξ by algebraic integers of degree at most n + 1. The same general transference principle applies to other classes of numbers, like approximation to ξ by algebraic units of degree at most n + 2, as Teuli ́e showed in 2001. Recall that Dirichlet’s theorem on simultaneous rational approximation yields λn ≥ 1/n. However, we still don’t know, for any n ≥ 3, if λn is equal to 1/n or strictly greater. Inthistalk,weconcentrateonthecasesn=2andn=3. Forn=2,Ishowedin 2003 that the upper bound of Davenport and Schmidt for λ2 is best possible, namely that λ2 = 1/γ ∼= 0.618, where γ stands for the golden ratio. Then, for many years, I thought that λ3 could be equal to the positive root λ3 ∼= 0.4245 of the polynomial T 2 − γ3T + γ, until I realized that it is strictly smaller. As the argument lead only to a very small improvement on the upper bound, I simply published, in 2008, the proof that λ3 ≤ λ3. In the presentation, we take the point of view of parametric geometry of numbers. We first recall the basic facts that we need about n-systems and dual n-systems. For n = 2, we explain why a point (1,ξ,ξ2) with optimal exponent λ2(ξ) = 1/γ admits a very simple self-similar dual 3-system, we give generic algebraic relations between the points of Z3 that realize this map up to a bounded difference, and we show how these in turn determine the point (1, ξ, ξ2). One can hope that a similar phenomenon holds for each n ≥ 2. For n = 3, assuming that λ3(ξ) = λ3, we find an interesting self-similar dual 4-system attached to the point (1,ξ,ξ2,ξ3) and algebraic relations with similar properties between the points that realize it up to bounded difference. However, they eventually lead to a contradiction. . . In general, the theory attaches a dual n-system P = (P1,...,Pn): [0,∞) → Rn to any non-zero point u of Rn, and P is unique up to bounded difference. This encodes most of the Diophantine approximation properties of u. For a geometric progression u = (1,ξ,ξ2,ξ3) in R4 with λ3(ξ) > √ 2 − 1 ∼= 0.4142, we can show that the behavior of P is qualitatively much simpler than that of a general dual 4-system. Moreover, the differences P3(q) − P1(q) and P4(q) − P2(q) both tend to infinity with q. Based on this, we deduce the existence of a sequence of integral bases of R4 which, in a simple way, realize P up to a bounded difference. We propose this as a tool to improve the present upper bound λ3 on λ3(ξ). By contrast, the current way of studying λn(ξ) for a general n is to form a sequence of so-called minimal points for u = (1,ξ,...,ξn), which can be loosely described as a sequence of points of Zn+1 that realize the first component P1 of P up to bounded difference.
15:10
Pause / Break
Pause / Break
15:10 - 15:20
Room: 0B120
15:20
Stéphane Fischler
Stéphane Fischler
15:20 - 15:50
Room: Auditorium Maurice GROSS
Irrationality measures of values of E-functions E-functions are a class of special functions introduced by Siegel in 1929; they include the exponential and Bessel functions. Values of E-functions at algebraic numbers are never Liouville : they are never extremely well approximated by rationals. If an E-function with rational coefficients is evaluated at a rational number, a more precise result holds : if irrational, the value has exponent of irrationality 2, like a randomly chosen number. This is a joint work with Tanguy Rivoal, based mostly on results of Shidlovsky, Chudnovsky, Andr ́e and Beukers.
15:50
Pause Café / Coffee Break
Pause Café / Coffee Break
15:50 - 16:20
Room: 0B120
16:20
Taehyeong Kim
Taehyeong Kim
16:20 - 16:50
Room: Auditorium Maurice GROSS
Infinitely badly approximable affine forms In this talk, we will consider infinitely badly approximable affine forms in the sense of inhomogeneous Diophantine approximation. We introduce a new concept of singularity for affine forms and characterize the infinitely badly approximable property by this singular property. We also discuss some applications of this characterization.
16:50
Pause / Break
Pause / Break
16:50 - 17:00
Room: 0B120
17:00
Agamemnon Zafeiropoulos
Agamemnon Zafeiropoulos
17:00 - 17:30
Room: Auditorium Maurice GROSS
A variant of Kaufman’s measures in two dimensions. An old result of Kaufman showed that the set Bad of badly approximable numbers supports a family of probability measures with polynomial decay rate on their Fourier transform. We show that the same phenomenon can be observed in a two-dimensional setup: we consider the set B={(α,γ)∈[0,1]2 :inf∥qα−γ∥>0} and we prove that it supports certain probability measures with Frostman dimension arbitrarily close to 2 and Fourier transform with polynomial decay rate. (Joint work with S. Chow and E. Zorin).
19:00
Diner de conférence / Conference diner
Diner de conférence / Conference diner
19:00 - 21:00
mercredi 5 juin 2024
09:30
Dmitry Kleinbock
Dmitry Kleinbock
09:30 - 10:30
Room: Auditorium Maurice GROSS
“Simultaneously dense and non-dense” orbits in homogeneous dynamics and Diophantine approximation Consider a non-compact homogeneous space X with the action of a diagonal one-parameter subgroup. It is known that the set of points in X with bounded forward orbits has full Hausdorff dimension. Question: what about points with forward orbits both bounded and accumulating on a given z ∈ X? We prove that, barring a certain obvious obstruction, those points also form a set of large Hausdorff dimension. This is motivated by the subject of improving Dirichlet’s Theorem in Diophantine approximation. Joint work with Manfred Einsiedler and Anurag Rao.
10:30
Pause Café / Coffee Break
Pause Café / Coffee Break
10:30 - 11:00
Room: 0B120
11:00
Frédéric Paulin
Frédéric Paulin
11:00 - 12:00
Room: Auditorium Maurice GROSS
On Hausdorff dimension in inhomogeneous Diophantine approximation over global function fields We study inhomogeneous Diophantine approximation by elements of a global function field (over a finite field) in its completion for a discrete valuation. Given an (m,n) matrix A with coefficients in this completion and a small r > 0, we obtain an effective upper bound for the Hausdorff dimension of the set BadA(r) of r-badly approximable m-dimensional vectors, using an effective version of entropy rigidity in homogeneous dynamics for an appropriate diagonal action on the space of integral grids. We further characterize the matrices A for which BadA(r) has full Hausdorff dimension for some r > 0 by a Diophantine condition of singularity on average. This is a joint work with Taehyeong Kim and Seonhee Lim.
12:00
Pause / Break
Pause / Break
12:00 - 12:10
Room: 0B120
12:10
René Pfitscher
René Pfitscher
12:10 - 12:40
Room: Auditorium Maurice GROSS
Counting rational approximations in flag varieties In the divergence case of Khintchine's theorem, Schmidt obtained an asymptotic formula for the number of rational approximations of bounded height to almost every real number. Using exponential mixing in the space of lattices, we prove versions of this theorem for intrinsic diophantine approximation on quadrics, grassmannians, and other examples of flag varieties.
jeudi 6 juin 2024
09:30
Yann Bugeaud
Yann Bugeaud
09:30 - 10:30
Room: Auditorium Maurice GROSS
On the b-ary expansion of e Let b ≥ 2 be an integer. The exponent vb (resp., vb′) and the uniform ′ rational numbers whose denominator is a power of b (resp., is of the form br(bs − 1)). Said differently and informally, we look at the lengths of the blocks of digit 0 (or of digit (b − 1)) and at the lengths of repeated blocks in the base-b expansion of a exponent vb (resp., v ) measure the quality of approximation to a real number by b 5 real number. We discuss several results on these four exponents and explain how aninequality between v and v implies that the base-b expansion of any real number whose irrationality exponent is sufficiently close to 2 cannot be too ‘simple’, in the sense that it contains at least cn different blocks of digits of length n, for some c > 1 and every integer n sufficiently large. In particular, the b-ary expansion of e contains at least 10n/9 different blocks of digits of length n, if n is large enough.
10:30
Pause Café / Coffee Break
Pause Café / Coffee Break
10:30 - 11:00
Room: 0B120
11:00
Stéphane Seuret
Stéphane Seuret
11:00 - 11:30
Room: Auditorium Maurice GROSS
An asymmetric version of the Littlewood conjecture In this talk, we study an asymmetric version of the Littlewood conjecture proposed by Y. Bugeaud. A parameter σ ∈ [0,1] being fixed, we study the set B(σ) of those pairs of real numbers (x,y) such thatinfq≥1(q · max(∥qx∥ ∥qy∥)1+σ min(∥qx∥ ∥qy∥)1−σ ) > 0. Counter-examples to the Littlewood conjecture would belong to B(0) and appear as an interpolation from the set B(1) corresponding to the badly approximable vectors in dimension 2. We prove that for every σ ∈ [0,1], B(σ) has Hausdorff dimension 2, and propose some natural conjectures around such sets. Joint work in progress with F. Adiceam.
11:30
Pause / Break
Pause / Break
11:30 - 11:40
Room: 0B120
11:40
Volodymyr Pavlenkov
Volodymyr Pavlenkov
11:40 - 12:10
Room: Auditorium Maurice GROSS
Inhomogeneous Diophantine Approximation with restraint denominators on M0-sets and some applications This is a joint result with Evgeniy Zorin. In this talk I will present a Schmidt-type theorem for Diophantine approximations with restraint denominators of sufficiently slow growth on M0-sets. Basically, the balance condition between the growth rate of denominators and the decay rate of the Fourier transform of Rajchman measure, supported on M0-sets, will be considered; this balance condition implies a Schmidt-type result. I will also show some applications: Khintchine Theorem on the set of Liouville numbers; Hausdorff dimension of subsets of inhomogeneous ψ-well approximable real numbers; Schmidt-type theorem for Diophantine approximations with denominators of polynomial growth.
14:10
Cagri Sert
Cagri Sert
14:10 - 15:10
Room: Auditorium Maurice GROSS
Projections of self-affine fractals If a subset X of Rd is projected onto a linear subspace then the Hausdorff dimension of its image is bounded above by the rank of the projection and by the dimension of the set X itself. When the Hausdorff dimension of the image is smaller than both of these values the projection is called an exceptional projection for the set X. By the classical theorem of Marstrand, the set of exceptional projections of a Borel set always has Lebesgue measure zero when considered as a subset of the relevant Grassmannian. I will describe some results from an ongoing systematic study of the exceptional projections of self-affine sets describing, among others, a mechanism to create exceptional projections. As an application, we will discuss an example of a strongly irreducible self-affine set in R4 whose set of exceptional projections includes a nontrivial subvariety of the Grassmannian. Ongoing joint work with Ian Morris.
15:10
Pause / Break
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15:10 - 15:20
Room: 0B120
15:20
Gaurav Aggarwal
Gaurav Aggarwal
15:20 - 15:50
Room: Auditorium Maurice GROSS
Joint Equidistribution of Approximates The distribution of integer points on varieties has occupied mathematicians for centuries. In the 1950’s Linnik used an “‘ergodic method” to prove the equidistribution of integer points on large spheres under a congruence condition. As shown by Maaß, this problem is closely related to modular forms. Subsequently, there were spectacular developments both from the analytic as well as ergodic side. I will discuss a more refined problem, namely the joint distribution of lattice points in conjunction with other arithmetic data. An example of such data is the ”shape” of an associated lattice, or in number theoretic language, a Heegner point. In a completely different direction, a ”Poincaré section” is a classical and useful tool in ergodic theory and dynamical systems. Recently, Shapira and Weiss, constructed a Poincaré section for the geodesic flow on the moduli space of lattices to study joint equidistribution properties. Their work in fact is very general but crucially uses the fact that the acting group has rank one. In joint work with Anish Ghosh, we develop a new method to deal with actions of higher rank groups. I will explain this and, if time permits, some corollaries in Diophantine analysis.
15:50
Pause Café / Coffee Break
Pause Café / Coffee Break
15:50 - 16:20
Room: 0B120
16:20
Shreyasi Datta
Shreyasi Datta
16:20 - 16:50
Room: Auditorium Maurice GROSS
Rational points near manifolds and the Khintchine theorem We discuss a problem in Diophantine approximation which is related to counting rational points near a manifold. The proof uses tools from homogeneous dynamics and geometry of numbers. This is a joint work with Victor Beresnevich.
16:50
Pause / Break
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16:50 - 17:00
Room: 0B120
17:00
Jiyoung Han
Jiyoung Han
17:00 - 17:30
Room: Auditorium Maurice GROSS
Quantitative Khintchine--Groshev theorem on S-arithmetic numbers In this talk, I would like to introduce two analogs of S-arithmetic generalization of Diophantine approximation problems. One way to obtain quantitative results for Diophantine approximation over the real field is by utilizing Schmidt's counting theorem on the family of expanding Borel sets. We will explore how this approach can be extended to S-arithmetic Diophantine approximation, taking into consideration certain limitations.
vendredi 7 juin 2024
09:30
Anish Ghosh
Anish Ghosh
09:30 - 10:30
Room: Auditorium Maurice GROSS
Dynamics on the space of affine lattices and inhomogeneous Diophantine approximation. We establish a new dynamical result on the space of affine lattices. Using this, we uncover some new Diophantine properties of affine forms. Joint work with Gaurav Aggarwal.
10:30
Pause Café / Coffee Break
Pause Café / Coffee Break
10:30 - 11:00
Room: 0B120
11:00
Catalin Badea
Catalin Badea
11:00 - 11:30
Room: Auditorium Maurice GROSS
Times-2 and Times-3 Invariant Measures and Exceptional Sets of Uniform Distribution We explore Furstenberg’s times-2, times-3 conjecture, which poses the question of whether the normalized Lebesgue measure is the sole atom-free probability measure invariant under both times-2 and times-3 maps. Additionally, we analyze the size of exceptional sets associated with (almost) uniform distribution, which are linked to a sequence of positive integers and a measure on the circle. This is joint work with Sophie Grivaux.
11:30
Pause / Break
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11:30 - 11:40
Room: 0B120
11:40
Prasuna Bandi
Prasuna Bandi
11:40 - 12:10
Room: Auditorium Maurice GROSS
Exact weighted approximation I will discuss the results on the Exact ψ-approximable set in Diophantine approximation. Further, in the weighted setting, we will show that its Hausdorff dimension is equal to that of the ψ-well approximable set under certain conditions on ψ. This is a joint work with Reynold Fregoli.
14:10
Stéphane Jaffard
Stéphane Jaffard
14:10 - 15:10
Room: Auditorium Maurice GROSS
Some interplays between multifractal analysis and Diophantine approximation Multifractal analysis deals with the determination of the pointwise regularity of everywhere irregular functions. It is therefore not surprising that many functions which had been proposed as examples or counter-examples of “pathological” functions turned out to be multifractal. What is more remarkable is that they share a common property: their pointwise regularity exponent at a point x depends in a simple way on the Diophantine approximation exponent of x. This is the case of the famous examples that Riemann proposed in his “Habilitationshrift” of functions that are Riemann integrable, but not Cauchy integrable, and which have jumps at rational numbers. It is also the case for a trigonometric series which Riemann proposed as a tentative example of a continuous nowhere differentiable function. Other important examples were obtained as particular cases of Davenport series and, more recently, it was also the case for the Brjuno function which was introduced by Yoccoz because it encapsulates a key information concerning analytic small divisor problems in dimension 1, this function now being one example among an important family. We will show that direct and wavelet methods are in competition or can be combined in order to determine the pointwise regularity exponents of these functions and how these methods explain why their regularity exponents are related with the Diophantine approximation properties of the point considered. Finally, we will mention several open problems concerning the regularity of such functions.
15:10
Pause / Break
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15:10 - 15:20
Room: 0B120
15:20
Arnaud Durand
Arnaud Durand
15:20 - 15:50
Room: Auditorium Maurice GROSS
Capacities and (large) intersections for random sets in metric spaces, with applications in dynamical Diophantine approximation We consider, in general metric spaces, the classes of random sets that are bound to intersect almost surely any deterministic set with positive capacity in a given gauge function. This property yields a lower bound on the size of the intersection of these random sets with arbitrary deterministic sets. It also implies Falconer’s large intersection property. As an illustration, we study limsup sets based on random balls, and present a connection with Dvoretzky’s covering problem and dynamical Diophantine approximation.
15:50
Pause Café / Coffee Break
Pause Café / Coffee Break
15:50 - 16:20
Room: 0B120
16:20
Edouard Daviaud
Edouard Daviaud
16:20 - 16:50
Room: Auditorium Maurice GROSS
A certain type of approximation by polynomials with algebraic coefficients Let $N\in\mathbb{N}$ be an integer and $\mathcal{A}=\left\{q_1,....,q_N\right\}$ be a set of algebraic numbers. Given $k\in\mathbb{N}$ call $\mathcal{P}_{\mathcal{A},k}$ the set of polynomials of degree smaller than $k$ and coefficient in $\mathcal{A}$ by $\mathcal{P}_{\mathcal{A},k}$ and $\mathcal{P}_{\mathcal{A}}$ the collection of every polynomials with coefficient in $\mathcal{A}$, that is \begin{align*} \mathcal{P}_{\mathcal{A},k}=\left\{P(X)=\sum_{i=0}^k a_i X^i, a_i \in\mathcal{A}\right\}\text{ and }\mathcal{P}_{\mathcal{A}}=\bigcup_{k\geq 0}\mathcal{P}_{\mathcal{A},k}. \end{align*} Given $t\in(0,1)$ a natural question is to investigate the Hausdorff dimension of real numbers approximable at a given rate by elements $P(t)$ where $P\in \mathcal{P}_{\mathcal{A}},$ i.e., determining for every mapping $\phi:\mathbb{N}\to \mathbb{R}_+,$ $$\qquad \qquad \dim_H W_{\mathcal{A},t}(\phi)=\left\{x\in\mathbb{R} : \ \vert x-P(t)\vert\leq \phi(\deg(P))\text{ for infinitely many }P\in\mathcal{P}_{\mathcal{A}}\right\}. $$ For instance, a consequence of the mass transference principle of Beresnevich and Velani shows that for $\mathcal{A}_1=\left\{0,\frac{2}{3}\right\}$, $t_1=\frac{1}{3}$, $\delta\geq 1,$ $\phi(n)=t_1^{n\delta},$ one has $$\dim_H W_{\mathcal{A}_1,t_1}(\phi)=\frac{\log 2}{\delta \log 3}.$$ In comparison, some quick calculation shows that for $\mathcal{A}_2=\left\{\frac{1}{7},\frac{3}{7},\frac{5}{7}\right\}$, $t_2=\frac{1}{7}$, $\delta> 1,$ $\phi(n)=t_2^{n\delta},$ one has $$\dim_H W_{\mathcal{A}_2,t_2}(\phi)=0.$$ In this talk, we provide some general results regarding this problem and some partial results aiming at describing the possible behaviors one can encounter. We will more particularly show that the dichotomy between the two cases mentioned occurs when $t$ is the inverse of a Pisot number and the coefficient are in $\mathbb{Z}[t].$ In particular, the results presented will feature new techniques regarding the mass transference principle when the reference measure is not Lebesgue and the sequence of balls we consider overlaps substantially.
16:50
Pause / Break
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16:50 - 17:00
Room: 0B120
17:00
Ioannis Tsokanos
Ioannis Tsokanos
17:00 - 17:30
Room: Auditorium Maurice GROSS
Stability and Shadowing of Non-invertible p-adic Dynamics A continuous dynamical system is a couple (X,f) where (X,d) is a metric space and f : X → X is a continuous map (called dynamic). The notions of stability and shadowing, introduced in the second third of the 20th century in the works of Andronov, Pontrjagin, Bowen, and Sinai, play a fundamental role in several branches of dynamical systems. For a system (X,f) to be stable roughly means that its analytical properties (e.g. the behavior of its orbits) are not affected upon introducing sufficiently small noises in the system. A map f is said to be shadowing if every pseudo-orbit {xn}n∈N (i.e. d (f (xn) , xn+1) is small for every n ∈ N) is close, with respect to the supreme norm, to a real orbit {fn(x)}n∈N. The stability theory of compact topological manifolds with positive and finite dimensions is well-developed. The classical results describe how the two concepts of stability and shadowing are related, especially when the dynamic under consideration is a homeomorphism. However, the study of these dynamical concepts in zero- dimensional compact spaces has only recently started developing. A notable family of zero-dimensional compact spaces is the Cantor spaces. Examples of Cantor spaces include fractal sets such as the famous Cantor set and the metric space of the p-adic integers Zp. This work concerns the dynamics of p-adic integers and, in particular, families of non-invertible maps that admit, however, right or left inverses. The results provide sufficient conditions for stability and shadowing properties to arise. As a consequence, the context developed unifies many of the known examples while, at the same time, providing new ones.