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1999 | Buch

Heights of Polynomials and Entropy in Algebraic Dynamics

verfasst von: Graham Everest, Thomas Ward

Verlag: Springer London

Buchreihe : Universitext

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Über dieses Buch

Arithmetic geometry and algebraic dynamical systems are flourishing areas of mathematics. Both subjects have highly technical aspects, yet both of­ fer a rich supply of down-to-earth examples. Both have much to gain from each other in techniques and, more importantly, as a means for posing (and sometimes solving) outstanding problems. It is unlikely that new graduate students will have the time or the energy to master both. This book is in­ tended as a starting point for either topic, but is in content no more than an invitation. We hope to show that a rich common vein of ideas permeates both areas, and hope that further exploration of this commonality will result. Central to both topics is a notion of complexity. In arithmetic geome­ try 'height' measures arithmetical complexity of points on varieties, while in dynamical systems 'entropy' measures the orbit complexity of maps. The con­ nections between these two notions in explicit examples lie at the heart of the book. The fundamental objects which appear in both settings are polynomi­ als, so we are concerned principally with heights of polynomials. By working with polynomials rather than algebraic numbers we avoid local heights and p-adic valuations.

Inhaltsverzeichnis

Frontmatter
1. Lehmer, Mahler and Jensen
Abstract
In 1933, D.H. Lehmer published a paper [Leh33] entitled ‘Factorization of certain cyclotomic functions’. A by-product of his factorization method was a way of manufacturing large primes: ‘large’ should be interpreted in the light of available computing machinery in 1933 (see Section 1.6 below). The construction was to take a monic, integral polynomial
with factorization over ℂ
Graham Everest, Thomas Ward
2. Dynamical Systems
Abstract
The first connection between Mahler’s measure and algebraic dynamical systems is that the topological entropy of such systems always turns out to be the Mahler measure of an integral polynomial.
Graham Everest, Thomas Ward
3. Mahler’s Measure in Many Variables
Abstract
Mahler’s lemma (Lemma 1.8) suggests how to generalize the measure of polynomials in one variable to several variables. In this chapter we extend some of the results of Chapter 1 to this more general measure.
Graham Everest, Thomas Ward
4. Higher-Dimensional Dynamical Systems
Abstract
In Chapter 2 a dynamical system was associated to each integer polynomial F in one variable. The dynamical system was given by an automorphism T F of a compact group X F (in the general case of Section 2.3). The map X F × ℤ → X F defined by (x, n) ↦ T F n x is then an action of ℤ by automorphisms of X F . In this chapter we introduce higher-dimensional dynamical systems (actions of ℤ n for n ≥ 2) associated to polynomials in several variables.
Graham Everest, Thomas Ward
5. Elliptic Heights
Abstract
An elliptic curve is a mathematical object with many facets: geometric, analytic, number-theoretic. Rigorous treatments may be found in the books by Husemöller [Hus87], Koblitz [Kob84] and Silverman [Si186], [Si194].
Graham Everest, Thomas Ward
6. The Elliptic Mahler Measure
Abstract
This chapter has three themes. In Section 6.1 a very short introduction to the classical theory of elliptic functions is given. In Sections 6.2, 6.3 and 6.5 some recent work on the elliptic Mahler measure is presented. Sections 6.4 and 6.6 contain evidence for a possible family of dynamical systems associated to elliptic curves whose dynamical properties are linked to the elliptic Mahler measure in a manner analogous to the connection between Chapters 1 and 3 and Chapters 2 and 4. This third theme is more speculative in nature.
Graham Everest, Thomas Ward
Backmatter
Metadaten
Titel
Heights of Polynomials and Entropy in Algebraic Dynamics
verfasst von
Graham Everest
Thomas Ward
Copyright-Jahr
1999
Verlag
Springer London
Electronic ISBN
978-1-4471-3898-3
Print ISBN
978-1-84996-854-6
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4471-3898-3