Invariant Measures
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In
mathematics Mathematics is an area of knowledge that includes the topics of numbers, formulas and related structures, shapes and the spaces in which they are contained, and quantities and their changes. These topics are represented in modern mathematics ...
, an invariant measure is a
measure Measure may refer to: * Measurement, the assignment of a number to a characteristic of an object or event Law * Ballot measure, proposed legislation in the United States * Church of England Measure, legislation of the Church of England * Mea ...
that is preserved by some function. The function may be a geometric transformation. For examples, circular angle is invariant under rotation, hyperbolic angle is invariant under squeeze mapping, and a difference of slopes is invariant under shear mapping.
Ergodic theory Ergodic theory (Greek: ' "work", ' "way") is a branch of mathematics that studies statistical properties of deterministic dynamical systems; it is the study of ergodicity. In this context, statistical properties means properties which are expres ...
is the study of invariant measures in
dynamical systems In mathematics, a dynamical system is a system in which a function describes the time dependence of a point in an ambient space. Examples include the mathematical models that describe the swinging of a clock pendulum, the flow of water in a p ...
. The Krylov–Bogolyubov theorem proves the existence of invariant measures under certain conditions on the function and space under consideration.


Definition

Let (X, \Sigma) be a measurable space and let f : X \to X be a
measurable function In mathematics and in particular measure theory, a measurable function is a function between the underlying sets of two measurable spaces that preserves the structure of the spaces: the preimage of any measurable set is measurable. This is in di ...
from X to itself. A measure \mu on (X, \Sigma) is said to be invariant under f if, for every measurable set A in \Sigma, \mu\left(f^(A)\right) = \mu(A). In terms of the pushforward measure, this states that f_*(\mu) = \mu. The collection of measures (usually
probability measure In mathematics, a probability measure is a real-valued function defined on a set of events in a probability space that satisfies measure properties such as ''countable additivity''. The difference between a probability measure and the more gener ...
s) on X that are invariant under f is sometimes denoted M_f(X). The collection of ergodic measures, E_f(X), is a subset of M_f(X). Moreover, any convex combination of two invariant measures is also invariant, so M_f(X) is a convex set; E_f(X) consists precisely of the extreme points of M_f(X). In the case of a dynamical system (X, T, \varphi), where (X, \Sigma) is a measurable space as before, T is a monoid and \varphi : T \times X \to X is the flow map, a measure \mu on (X, \Sigma) is said to be an invariant measure if it is an invariant measure for each map \varphi_t : X \to X. Explicitly, \mu is invariant if and only if \mu\left(\varphi_^(A)\right) = \mu(A) \qquad \text t \in T, A \in \Sigma. Put another way, \mu is an invariant measure for a sequence of
random variable A random variable (also called random quantity, aleatory variable, or stochastic variable) is a mathematical formalization of a quantity or object which depends on random events. It is a mapping or a function from possible outcomes (e.g., the po ...
s \left(Z_t\right)_ (perhaps a
Markov chain A Markov chain or Markov process is a stochastic model describing a sequence of possible events in which the probability of each event depends only on the state attained in the previous event. Informally, this may be thought of as, "What happe ...
or the solution to a stochastic differential equation) if, whenever the initial condition Z_0 is distributed according to \mu, so is Z_t for any later time t. When the dynamical system can be described by a transfer operator, then the invariant measure is an eigenvector of the operator, corresponding to an eigenvalue of 1, this being the largest eigenvalue as given by the Frobenius-Perron theorem.


Examples

* Consider the
real line In elementary mathematics, a number line is a picture of a graduated straight line (geometry), line that serves as visual representation of the real numbers. Every point of a number line is assumed to correspond to a real number, and every real ...
\R with its usual Borel σ-algebra; fix a \in \R and consider the translation map T_a : \R \to \R given by: T_a(x) = x + a. Then one-dimensional
Lebesgue measure In measure theory, a branch of mathematics, the Lebesgue measure, named after French mathematician Henri Lebesgue, is the standard way of assigning a measure to subsets of ''n''-dimensional Euclidean space. For ''n'' = 1, 2, or 3, it coincides wit ...
\lambda is an invariant measure for T_a. * More generally, on n-dimensional Euclidean space \R^n with its usual Borel σ-algebra, n-dimensional Lebesgue measure \lambda^n is an invariant measure for any isometry of Euclidean space, that is, a map T : \R^n \to \R^n that can be written as T(x) = A x + b for some n \times n orthogonal matrix A \in O(n) and a vector b \in \R^n. * The invariant measure in the first example is unique up to trivial renormalization with a constant factor. This does not have to be necessarily the case: Consider a set consisting of just two points \mathbf = \ and the identity map T = \operatorname which leaves each point fixed. Then any probability measure \mu : \mathbf \to \R is invariant. Note that \mathbf trivially has a decomposition into T-invariant components \ and \. * Area measure in the Euclidean plane is invariant under the special linear group \operatorname(2, \R) of the 2 \times 2 real matrices of determinant 1. * Every locally compact group has a
Haar measure In mathematical analysis, the Haar measure assigns an "invariant volume" to subsets of locally compact topological groups, consequently defining an integral for functions on those groups. This measure was introduced by Alfréd Haar in 1933, though ...
that is invariant under the group action.


See also

*


References

* John von Neumann (1999) ''Invariant measures'', American Mathematical Society {{DEFAULTSORT:Invariant Measure Dynamical systems Measures (measure theory)