Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Historical Preface
- General Outline
- Part I Volume Preserving Homeomorphisms of the Cube
- 1 Introduction to Parts I and II (Compact Manifolds)
- 2 Measure Preserving Homeomorphisms
- 3 Discrete Approximations
- 4 Transitive Homeomorphisms of In and Rn
- 5 Fixed Points and Area Preservation
- 6 Measure Preserving Lusin Theorem
- 7 Ergodic Homeomorphisms
- 8 Uniform Approximation in G[In, λ] and Generic Properties in M[In, λ]
- Part II Measure Preserving Homeomorphisms of a Compact Manifold
- Part III Measure Preserving Homeomorphisms of a Noncompact Manifold
- Appendix 1 Multiple Rokhlin Towers and Conjugacy Approximation
- Appendix 2 Homeomorphic Measures
- Bibliography
- Index
5 - Fixed Points and Area Preservation
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 August 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Historical Preface
- General Outline
- Part I Volume Preserving Homeomorphisms of the Cube
- 1 Introduction to Parts I and II (Compact Manifolds)
- 2 Measure Preserving Homeomorphisms
- 3 Discrete Approximations
- 4 Transitive Homeomorphisms of In and Rn
- 5 Fixed Points and Area Preservation
- 6 Measure Preserving Lusin Theorem
- 7 Ergodic Homeomorphisms
- 8 Uniform Approximation in G[In, λ] and Generic Properties in M[In, λ]
- Part II Measure Preserving Homeomorphisms of a Compact Manifold
- Part III Measure Preserving Homeomorphisms of a Noncompact Manifold
- Appendix 1 Multiple Rokhlin Towers and Conjugacy Approximation
- Appendix 2 Homeomorphic Measures
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Introduction
Fixed point theorems are usually purely topological in nature, and do not usually have any measure theoretic hypotheses. However, there are three surfaces where the assumption that a homeomorphism is area preserving, by itself or with additional assumptions, implies the existence of a fixed point: the open square, the torus, and the annulus. The reason only 2-dimensional manifolds are covered is that all these results follow from a purely topological fixed point theorem of Brouwer for homeomorphisms of the plane, known as the ‘Plane Translation Theorem’. This theorem says that if an orientation preserving homeomorphism of the plane has no fixed point then it is ‘like a translation’. This phrase can be made precise in various ways, but it will be sufficient for our purposes here to take it to mean ‘has no periodic points’.
Since the issue of fixed points is not a main concern of this book, we will not attempt to give the strongest forms of theorems, but merely show how results obtained earlier in the book can give simple demonstrations of the existence of fixed points. References to the stronger results of Franks and Flucher will be given.
The organization of this chapter is as follows. In Section 5.2 we state a special case of Brouwer's Plane Translation Theorem due to Andrea [32]. We apply this in Section 5.3 to prove a result of Montgomery [86] that any orientation preserving, area preserving homeomorphism of the open square has a fixed point.
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- Typical Dynamics of Volume Preserving Homeomorphisms , pp. 31 - 37Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2001