A measure-theoretic expansion exponent
Abstract
The expansion exponent (or expansion constant) for maps was introduced by Schreiber in s. In this paper, we introduce the analogous exponent for measures. We shall prove the following results: The expansion exponent of a measurable maps is equal to the minimum of the expansion exponent taken over the Borel probability measures. In particular, a map expands small distances (in the sense of Reddy r) if and only if every Borel probability has positive expansion exponent. Any nonatomic invariant measure with positive expansion exponent is positively expansive in the sense of m. For ergodic invariant measures, the Kolmogorov-Sinai entropy is bounded below by the product of the expansion exponent and the measure upper capacity. As a consequence, any ergodic invariant measure with both positive upper capacity and positive expansion exponent must have positive entropy.
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