Infinite mixing for one-dimensional maps with an indifferent fixed point

Abstract

We study the properties of `infinite-volume mixing' for two classes of intermittent maps: expanding maps [0,1] [0,1] with an indifferent fixed point at 0 preserving an infinite, absolutely continuous measure, and expanding maps R+ R+ with an indifferent fixed point at +∞ preserving the Lebesgue measure. All maps have full branches. While certain properties are easily adjudicated, the so-called global-local mixing, namely the decorrelation of a global and a local observable, is harder to prove. We do this for two subclasses of systems. The first subclass includes, among others, the Farey map. The second class includes the standard Pomeau-Manneville map x x+x2 mod 1. Morevoer, we use global-local mixing to prove certain limit theorems for our intermittent maps.

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