Talk:Krylov–Bogolyubov theorem

Latest comment: 12 years ago by Mcxz in topic Horrible Colors


Horrible Colors edit

The colors in this article are horrible and make me want to gouge my eyes out rather than to read the theorems. Mcxz (talk) 20:24, 7 June 2011 (UTC)Reply

Found on newsgroup edit

The following excerpt from sci.math may be of interest to future editors.


The Relationship Between Measure-Theoretic and Topological Notions:

It does not make sense to say that ergodicity is EQUIVALENT to TT (topological
transitivity).  A topological dynamical system, i.e. X compact metric with
T: X \rightarrow X continuous, has a different structure from a measure
theoretical dynamical system, i.e., (X, \M, \mu) a probability measure space
with T:X \rightarrow X a measureable mapping preserving the \mu measure, in the
sense that for all measureable sets E, \mu T^{-1}(E) = \mu (E).

However, given a TDS (topological dynamical system), there are always MTDS's
(measure-theoretical dynamical systems) associated with it.  First, take \M
to be the Borel algebra (smallest sigma algebra containing all the open and
closed sets).  Then the Krylov-Bogoliubov Theorem says that every T
continuous has at least one T-invariant measure, i.e. \mu such that
(X, Borel, \mu, T) is a measure theoretical dynamical system.  Moreover,
the set of Borel measures on X form a compact convex subset of a separable
Banach space, an infinite dimensional ``simplex'' whose vertices correspond
to delta measures on X, and for each T, the set of T-invariant measures
forms a ``sub-simplex''.  (You can actually draw this for the case of X
a finite space with the discrete topology; the geometry is quite beautiful,
although rather misleading vis a vis infinite X.)  A beautiful theorem says
that the ergodic T-invariant measures are exactly the vertices of the
sub-simplex of T-invariant measures!  The point is this:
:EVERY TDS is associated with at least one ergodic MTDS!
Also, TDS's clearly have ``a higher level of structure'' than MTDS's,
so your assertion about TT and ergodicity confused two levels of
structure.

[Note: A delta measure \delta_x is indeed a point mass: for all Borel
measureable  sets E, \delta_x(E) = 1 if x \in E and 0 otherwise.]

Nevertheless, there are relations between topological and measure theoretic
conditions.  For instance, if (X,T) is an invertible TDS (T is a homeo),
and if there exists an ergodic T-invariant measure which gives positive
measure to every nonempty open set, then (X, T) is TT.

Incidentally, the spelling “Bogoliubov” gets somewhat more Google hits. --KSmrqT 00:17, 27 October 2006 (UTC)Reply

Noted. Krylov-Bogoliubov theorem redirects to the main article, Krylov-Bogolyubov theorem. Sullivan.t.j 10:07, 27 October 2006 (UTC)Reply

Possible source to cite? edit

The Springer Online Encyclopædia of Mathematics has an article on the Krylov–Bogolyubov method of averaging which may be of interest. --KSmrqT 03:24, 27 October 2006 (UTC)Reply

The section about Markov processes is poorly written edit

I say this for no other reason than that it is never stated that time t takes real values.

Since this is an encylopedia, there is no way that a well written article could possibly omit this piece of information.