Solenoid (mathematics)

This page discusses a class of topological groups. For the wrapped loop of wire, see Solenoid.
The Smale-Williams solenoid.

In mathematics, a solenoid is a compact connected topological space (i.e. a continuum) that may be obtained as the inverse limit of an inverse system of topological groups and continuous homomorphisms

where each is a circle and fi is the map that uniformly wraps the circle for times () around the circle .[1]: Ch. 2 Def. (10.12)  This construction can be carried out geometrically in the three-dimensional Euclidean space R3. A solenoid is a one-dimensional homogeneous indecomposable continuum that has the structure of an abelian compact topological group.

Solenoids were first introduced by Vietoris for the case,[2] and by van Dantzig the case, where is fixed.[3] Such a solenoid arises as a one-dimensional expanding attractor, or Smale–Williams attractor, and forms an important example in the theory of hyperbolic dynamical systems.

  1. ^ Hewitt, Edwin; Ross, Kenneth A. (1979). Abstract Harmonic Analysis I: Structure of Topological Groups Integration Theory Group Representations. Grundlehren der Mathematischen Wissenschaften. Vol. 115. Berlin-New York: Springer. doi:10.1007/978-1-4419-8638-2. ISBN 978-0-387-94190-5.
  2. ^ Vietoris, L. (December 1927). "Über den höheren Zusammenhang kompakter Räume und eine Klasse von zusammenhangstreuen Abbildungen". Mathematische Annalen. 97 (1): 454–472. doi:10.1007/bf01447877. ISSN 0025-5831. S2CID 121172198.
  3. ^ van Dantzig, D. (1930). "Ueber topologisch homogene Kontinua". Fundamenta Mathematicae. 15: 102–125. doi:10.4064/fm-15-1-102-125. ISSN 0016-2736.

Developed by StudentB