2013
DOI: 10.1090/s0002-9939-2013-11768-5
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Hereditarily indecomposable inverse limits of graphs: shadowing, mixing and exactness

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Cited by 10 publications
(11 citation statements)
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“…Finally, the inverse limit lim ← − { f, S 1 } is the pseudocircle, since f has degree 1, by the result of Fearnley [17,Theorem 6.3] (for more details see also [19] or [26,Corollary 24] and comments therein) which completes the proof.…”
Section: Auxiliary Lemmasmentioning
confidence: 58%
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“…Finally, the inverse limit lim ← − { f, S 1 } is the pseudocircle, since f has degree 1, by the result of Fearnley [17,Theorem 6.3] (for more details see also [19] or [26,Corollary 24] and comments therein) which completes the proof.…”
Section: Auxiliary Lemmasmentioning
confidence: 58%
“…strange attractor with zero topological entropy. Such a construction, if possible, cannot be obtained by an application of the results of [26] (see also [23]) which is an essential ingredient of our approach (see Lemma 3.1).…”
Section: Question Is There a 2-torus Homeomorphism Homotopic To The Imentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…In fact a similar approach will be successful, if G is a topological graph with an endpoint p and f is a topologically exact map on G such that f (p) = p. Simply, most of our techniques work locally, so it is really unimportant that G is not an interval. The only essential ingredient is an endpoint which is a fixed point [15] (see also [8]).…”
Section: Mixing But Not Exact Maps and Pseudoarcmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…They provided a method of perturbation (in fact a sequence of perturbations), such that topologically exact map is transformed to a transitive map f such that inverse limit with f as bonding map gives the pseudoarc (it is worth noting, that a few years earlier a map on the pseudoarc with positive topological entropy was constructed by J. Kennedy in [10]). In fact, it can be proved that if f is a transitive map on a topological graph, and inverse limit of this graph with f as a bonding map is hereditarily indecomposable, then f must be mixing [15]. So in fact, all the maps constructed in [12] are topologically mixing.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%