In mathematics, an invariant set is a subset which does not change under the action of a group or other dynamical system. It often has the interpretation of a "place that one can never leave according to the given dynamical system".

Depending on the subject and on the author, "invariant set" may denote a variant of one of these two related, but distinct notions:

  1. A subset such that every point of is mapped again to . Points from outside of may still be mapped to . This the notion mostly considered in differential geometry and related fields. This variant is described below at one-sided definition;
  2. A subset such that every point of is mapped to if and only if it is already in . This is the notion mostly considered in probability theory and related fields[1][2][3], sometimes up to to null sets.[4][5][3] This variant is described below at two-sided definition.

The second variant is a special case of the first one, and for the case of group actions, the two variants coincide.

One-sided definition edit

Invariant sets in their one-sided definition have the property of being stable under the action, in the sense that their points will not leave the set. We give the definition for single functions, possibly with extra properties (such as being continuous or measurable), then for group actions, and finally for general monoid actions.

Definition for single functions edit

Let   be a function. A subset   is  -invariant if for every  ,

 

We can restate the condition equivalently in terms of preimages:

 

Definition for group actions edit

Let   be a monoid, let   be a group action, and denote the action of   on   by  . A subset   is  -invariant if for every   and every  ,

 

Equivalently, in terms of preimages: for every  ,

 

Note that since   is invertible, the inclusion can be replace by an equality, and so for groups the notion coincides with the two-sided definition given below.

General definition edit

More generally, let   be a monoid, let   be a monoid action, and denote the action of   on   by  . A subset   is  -invariant if for every   and every  ,

 

Equivalently, in terms of preimages: for every  ,

 

This generalizes the notion for groups, since every group is a monoid (but in this case it does not coincide with the two-sided version). It also generalizes the notion for functions, since every function   induces a unique action of the monoid   by  , and every action of   arises in this way.

Examples edit

One can construct more examples by replacing the set   and the function   with objects and morphisms of a more general category.

Two-sided definition edit

Invariant sets in their two-sided definition are mostly used in probability theory and related fields such as information theory and ergodic theory. They can have the interpretation of being "indifferent" to the action.

Definition edit

Let   be a function. A subset   is  -invariant if for every  ,

 

Equivalently, in terms of preimages:

 

More generally, let   be a monoid, let   be a monoid action, and denote the action of   on   by  . A subset   is  -invariant if for every   and every  ,

 

Equivalently, in terms of preimages: for every  ,

 

Properties edit

  • Every invariant set in the two-sided sense is invariant in the one-sided sense.
  • For group actions, the one-sided and two-sided versions of invariant set coincide.
  • The complement of a invariant in the two-sided definition set is also invariant (in the two-sided definition).

In what follows, given  , we call a function   invariant if and only if  , i.e. if   for all  .

  • A subset   is invariant (in the two-sided definition) if and only if its indicator function   is invariant.
  • Somewhat conversely, a function   is invariant if and only if for every  , the preimage   is invariant (in the two-sided definition).

In measure and probability theory edit

When   is a measure or measurable space and the action is given by measurable functions, one is interested in measurable invariant sets (in the two-sided definition).[1][2][3]

It is also common to consider invariance only up to null sets:[4][5][3] Given a probability space   and a measure-preserving function  , a measurable subset (event)   is called almost surely invariant if and only if its indicator function satisfies

 

for almost all  , i.e. the sets   and   only differ by a null set.

Similarly, given a measure-preserving Markov kernel  , we call a set   almost surely invariant if and only if

 

for almost all  .

When the action is given by measurable functions or by Markov kernels, invariant measurable subsets (in the two-sided definition) form a sigma-algebra, the invariant sigma-algebra. This is true both for almost surely invariant sets as well as for the invariant sets in the strict sense.

See also edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b Billingsley (1995), pp. 313–314
  2. ^ a b Douc et al. (2018), p. 99
  3. ^ a b c d Klenke (2020), p. 494
  4. ^ a b Viana & Oliveira (2016), p. 94
  5. ^ a b Durrett (2010), p. 330

References edit

  • Viana, Marcelo; Oliveira, Krerley (2016). Foundations of Ergodic Theory. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-107-12696-1.