In mathematics, the rotation number is an invariant of homeomorphisms of the circle.
History
editIt was first defined by Henri Poincaré in 1885, in relation to the precession of the perihelion of a planetary orbit. Poincaré later proved a theorem characterizing the existence of periodic orbits in terms of rationality of the rotation number.
Definition
editSuppose that is an orientation-preserving homeomorphism of the circle Then f may be lifted to a homeomorphism of the real line, satisfying
for every real number x and every integer m.
The rotation number of f is defined in terms of the iterates of F:
Henri Poincaré proved that the limit exists and is independent of the choice of the starting point x. The lift F is unique modulo integers, therefore the rotation number is a well-defined element of Intuitively, it measures the average rotation angle along the orbits of f.
Example
editIf is a rotation by (where ), then
and its rotation number is (cf. irrational rotation).
Properties
editThe rotation number is invariant under topological conjugacy, and even monotone topological semiconjugacy: if f and g are two homeomorphisms of the circle and
for a monotone continuous map h of the circle into itself (not necessarily homeomorphic) then f and g have the same rotation numbers. It was used by Poincaré and Arnaud Denjoy for topological classification of homeomorphisms of the circle. There are two distinct possibilities.
- The rotation number of f is a rational number p/q (in the lowest terms). Then f has a periodic orbit, every periodic orbit has period q, and the order of the points on each such orbit coincides with the order of the points for a rotation by p/q. Moreover, every forward orbit of f converges to a periodic orbit. The same is true for backward orbits, corresponding to iterations of f –1, but the limiting periodic orbits in forward and backward directions may be different.
- The rotation number of f is an irrational number θ. Then f has no periodic orbits (this follows immediately by considering a periodic point x of f). There are two subcases.
- There exists a dense orbit. In this case f is topologically conjugate to the irrational rotation by the angle θ and all orbits are dense. Denjoy proved that this possibility is always realized when f is twice continuously differentiable.
- There exists a Cantor set C invariant under f. Then C is a unique minimal set and the orbits of all points both in forward and backward direction converge to C. In this case, f is semiconjugate to the irrational rotation by θ, and the semiconjugating map h of degree 1 is constant on components of the complement of C.
The rotation number is continuous when viewed as a map from the group of homeomorphisms (with C0 topology) of the circle into the circle.
See also
editReferences
edit- Herman, Michael Robert (December 1979). "Sur la conjugaison différentiable des difféomorphismes du cercle à des rotations" [On the Differentiable Conjugation of Diffeomorphisms from the Circle to Rotations]. Publications Mathématiques de l'IHÉS (in French). 49: 5–233. doi:10.1007/BF02684798. S2CID 118356096., also SciSpace for smaller file size in pdf ver 1.3
- Poincaré, Henri (1885). "Sur les courbes définies par les équations différentielles (III)". Journal de Mathématiques Pures et Appliquées (in French). 1: 167–244.
External links
edit- Michał Misiurewicz (ed.). "Rotation theory". Scholarpedia.
- Weisstein, Eric W. "Map Winding Number". From MathWorld--A Wolfram Web Resource.