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Effective high-temperature estimates for intermittent maps
Author(s) -
Benoît Kloeckner
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
ergodic theory and dynamical systems
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.571
H-Index - 61
eISSN - 1469-4417
pISSN - 0143-3857
DOI - 10.1017/etds.2017.111
Subject(s) - spectral gap , operator (biology) , constant (computer programming) , mathematics , perturbation (astronomy) , transfer operator , limit (mathematics) , transfer (computing) , bounded function , bounded variation , spectral properties , variation (astronomy) , perturbation theory (quantum mechanics) , statistical physics , mathematical analysis , pure mathematics , physics , quantum mechanics , computer science , chemistry , biochemistry , repressor , parallel computing , transcription factor , astrophysics , gene , programming language
Using quantitative perturbation theory for linear operators, we prove a spectral gap for transfer operators of various families of intermittent maps with almost constant potentials (‘high-temperature’ regime). Hölder and bounded $p$ -variation potentials are treated, in each case under a suitable assumption on the map, but the method should apply more generally. It is notably proved that for any Pommeau–Manneville map, any potential with Lipschitz constant less than 0.0014 has a transfer operator acting on $\operatorname{Lip}([0,1])$ with a spectral gap; and that for any two-to-one unimodal map, any potential with total variation less than 0.0069 has a transfer operator acting on $\operatorname{BV}([0,1])$ with a spectral gap. We also prove under quite general hypotheses that the classical definition of spectral gap coincides with the formally stronger one used in Giulietti et al [The calculus of thermodynamical formalism. J. Eur. Math. Soc., to appear. Preprint, 2015, arXiv:1508.01297], allowing all results there to be applied under the high-temperature bounds proved here: analyticity of pressure and equilibrium states, central limit theorem, etc.

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