Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-94fs2 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-17T15:19:56.053Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Statistical stability and linear response for random hyperbolic dynamics

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 December 2021

DAVOR DRAGIČEVIĆ
Affiliation:
Department of Mathematics, University of Rijeka, Rijeka, Croatia (e-mail: [email protected])
JULIEN SEDRO*
Affiliation:
Laboratoire de Probabilités, Statistique et Modélisation (LPSM), Sorbonne Université, Université de Paris, 4 Place Jussieu, 75005 Paris, France
*
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

We consider families of random products of close-by Anosov diffeomorphisms, and show that statistical stability and linear response hold for the associated families of equivariant and stationary measures. Our analysis relies on the study of the top Oseledets space of a parametrized transfer operator cocycle, as well as ad-hoc abstract perturbation statements. As an application, we show that, when the quenched central limit theorem (CLT) holds, under the conditions that ensure linear response for our cocycle, the variance in the CLT depends differentiably on the parameter.

Type
Original Article
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2021. Published by Cambridge University Press

1 Introduction

The aim of this paper is to study stability for the families of equivariant and stationary measures associated with a random product of (uniformly) hyperbolic diffeomorphisms. Those stability properties are related to the following question: in the context of non-autonomous dynamics, how do the statistical properties change when one perturbs the dynamics?

More precisely, we consider here a family of random hyperbolic diffeomorphisms, $T_{\omega ,\varepsilon }$ , acting on some Riemannian manifold M and indexed by $\omega \in \Omega $ and $\varepsilon \in I$ , where $(\Omega ,\mathcal F,\mathbb P)$ is some probability space, and $0\in I\subset \mathbb R$ is some interval. Endowing the probability space with an invertible map $\sigma :\Omega \circlearrowleft $ that is measure-preserving and ergodic, we may form the random products over $\sigma $ , defined by

(1) $$ \begin{align} T_{\omega,\varepsilon}^n:=T_{\sigma^n\omega,\varepsilon}\circ\cdots\circ T_{\omega,\varepsilon}. \end{align} $$

Assuming that this random product admits a physical equivariant measure, that is, a measure $h_{\omega }^\varepsilon $ satisfying the equivariance condition

(2) $$ \begin{align} T_{\omega,\varepsilon}^*h_{\omega}^\varepsilon=h_{\sigma\omega}^\varepsilon, \end{align} $$

and such that $\mathbb P$ -almost surely, the ergodic basin of $h_{\omega }^\varepsilon $ has positive Riemannian volume (meaning that for $\mathbb P$ -almost every $\omega \in \Omega $ , the set $\{x\in M,({1}/{n})\sum _{k=0}^{n-1}\delta _{T^k_{\omega ,\varepsilon }x}\longrightarrow h_{\omega }^\varepsilon \text {weakly}\}$ has positive Riemannian volume), we ask the following questions: is the map $\varepsilon \in I\mapsto h_{\omega }^\varepsilon $ continuous at $\varepsilon =0$ in some suitable sense? Is it differentiable? If so, can one derive an explicit formula for its derivative?

The first question is the statistical stability problem, the last two are called the linear response problem.

Linear response has received extensive attention, in various context: in the deterministic case (which corresponds, in our setting, to the case where $\Omega $ is reduced to a singleton and one considers a smooth family of maps $(T_\varepsilon )_{\varepsilon \in I}$ ), expanding maps of the circle [Reference Baladi6] or in higher dimension [Reference Baladi7, Reference Sedro and Rugh29], piecewise expanding maps of the interval [Reference Baladi5, Reference Baladi and Smania9] or more general unimodal maps [Reference Baladi and Smania10], and intermittent maps [Reference Bahsoun, Ruziboev and Saussol3, Reference Baladi and Todd11, Reference Korepanov27] have been studied. In the setting of hyperbolic dynamics, the problem of linear response was first considered by Ruelle [Reference Ruelle28] for uniformly hyperbolic maps. A different approach, the so-called weak spectral perturbation (or Gouëzel–Keller–Liverani) theory, was devised by [Reference Gonzalez-Tokman and Quas26] (see also [Reference Baladi7]). Finally, we mention the paper [Reference Dragičević and Hafouta18], where linear response is established for a wide class of partially hyperbolic systems.

The random case may be divided into two different subcases, the annealed case and the quenched case, the latter of which is the focus of this paper. The annealed case may be studied by methods very similar to the deterministic case, namely weak spectral perturbation for the associated family of transfer operators, and often enjoy a convenient ‘regularization property’ (see, e.g., [Reference Galatolo and Giulietti23] or [Reference Gouëzel and Liverani24]). We also mention [Reference Bahsoun and Saussol2], where the authors deal with annealed perturbation of uniformly and non-uniformly expanding maps. For annealed perturbation of Anosov diffeomorphisms, very general results were obtained in [Reference Gonzalez-Tokman and Quas26].

The study of the quenched case is more recent, and the literature on the subject is sparse. Indeed, in this situation one cannot use the tools devised in the deterministic or annealed case, as the dynamically relevant objects shift from the spectral data of individual transfer operators to the Lyapunov–Oseledets spectra associated with a cocycle of such transfer operators. For the statistical stability problem in this context, we refer to [Reference Baladi4, Reference Baladi, Kondah and Schmitt8, Reference Bogenschütz12, Reference Froyland, Gonzalez-Tokman and Quas21]. Recently, the interesting preprint [Reference Crimmins and Nakano14] develops an analogue of the Gouëzel–Keller–Liverani theory to study regularity of the exceptional Oseledets spectrum, for quasi-compact cocycles having a dominated splitting, but only up to Lipschitz regularity. This machinery could, in principle, be applied to our setting, to obtain a result similar to our Theorem 8. We observe that, although our result is less general because it only concerns the top Oseledets space, it has the nice property of giving an explicit modulus of continuity, and to have an elementary proof.

For the response problem, a very general study is presented in [Reference Sedro30], in the case of a random products of uniformly expanding maps, with a finite or countable number of branches, and in any finite dimension. The idea is to express the equivariant family of measures of the random product as the fixed point of a family of cone-contracting maps that exhibits suitable regularity properties, and to deduce the wanted smoothness of the equivariant measures by some implicit-function-like argument.

We emphasize that the results we present here rely on methods that are quite different from those in the previously discussed paper, as they do not rely on Birkhoff cone contraction techniques. We also remark that, in contrast to the expanding case, the use of the Gouëzel–Liverani scale of anisotropic spaces (or, for that matter, any of the available scale of anisotropic spaces) limits us to products of nearby (in the $C^{r+1}$ topology) diffeomorphisms.

A few months after the present paper was made available as a preprint, the Gouëzel–Keller–Liverani theory for cocycles [Reference Crimmins and Nakano14] was further generalized in [Reference Conze and Raugi15], to cover the case of quenched linear, as well as higher-order, response. In particular, [Reference Conze and Raugi15, Theorem 3.6] generalizes our Theorem 12 to higher-order Taylor expansions, as remarked in [Reference Conze and Raugi15, Remark 3.8]. The main idea behind this generalization, namely lifting the cocycle to the so-called Mather operator (to which the deterministic Gouëzel–Keller–Liverani theory is then applied), is somehow present in our approach (see, e.g., the proof of Proposition 7), although the latter is independent of weak spectral perturbation theory. We finally remark that, although it should be possible in principle, [Reference Conze and Raugi15] does not state any linear response formula.

Before going any further, we would like to point out a subtle issue, that is peculiar to the quenched case, and related to the ‘suitable sense’ for which the question of statistical stability and linear response may be answered. In the deterministic case, this means finding a suitable topology into which the invariant measure will live (e.g. $C^r(\mathbb S^1,\mathbb {R})$ , $r>1$ for the absolutely continuous invariant probability measure of an expanding map of the circle, or as a distribution of order one for smooth deformations of unimodal maps, see [Reference Baladi and Smania10]). In the quenched case, one also has to take care of the random parameter $\omega \in \Omega $ . There are several natural possibilities: the almost sure sense (i.e. one studies the almost sure regularity of $\varepsilon \in I\mapsto h_{\omega }^\varepsilon \in \mathcal B$ , with $\mathcal B$ a suitable Banach space in the range), the essentially bounded sense (where one studies the regularity of $\varepsilon \in I\mapsto h_{\omega }^\varepsilon \in L^\infty (\Omega ,\mathcal B)$ ), and the $L^1$ sense (where the map of interest is $\varepsilon \in I\mapsto h_{\omega }^\varepsilon \in L^1(\Omega ,\mathcal B)$ ). It is easy to see that the $L^\infty $ sense is the strongest one. Furthermore, given the relation between the equivariant measures and the stationary measure, the $L^1$ sense implies asking the questions of stability and response for the stationary measure of the skew product. However, an ambiguity arises when one considers the ‘almost sure’ sense: indeed, it may be that the set of random parameters for which certain estimates on the equivariant measure $h_{\omega }^\varepsilon $ holds (let us denote it by $\Omega _\varepsilon $ ) depends on $\varepsilon $ . In this situation, it is not clear whether a statement such as ‘ $h_{\omega }^\varepsilon \to h_{\omega }^0$ when $\varepsilon \to 0$ , $\mathbb P$ -almost surely’ has any probabilistic meaning, because it would hold on $\bigcap _{\varepsilon \in I}\Omega _\varepsilon $ , which may be non-measurable set (as the intersection is taken over an uncountable set). For this reason, we refrain from considering the ‘almost sure’ sense for the regularity results we present, and instead focus on the $L^\infty $ -sense.

The paper is organized as follows. In §2, after recalling useful properties of the Gouëzel–Liverani anisotropic Banach spaces, we present and discuss our setup (Hypothesis 1), we state our main result (Theorem 1) as well as a quenched linear response formula (3), reminiscent of [Reference Ruelle28, Reference Sedro30], and give explicit examples of systems to which this setting apply (§2.3). In §3, we present abstract theorems on quenched statistical stability (Theorem 8) and quenched linear response (Theorem 12), applicable in particular to the equivariant measure associated with a (sufficiently) smooth family of Anosov diffeomorphisms cocycles. In §4, we give the proof of the main theorem (Theorem 1). In §5, we give various applications of the previous results: first, we remark in Theorem 15 that Theorem 12 easily implies a response for the stationary measure of the skew product associated with the cocycle, and that this can be used to establish linear response for a class of deterministic, partially hyperbolic systems. In §5.2, we prove Theorem 17 which gives the differentiability with respect to the parameter of the variance in the quenched central limit theorem (satisfied by the Birkhoff sum of random observable satisfying certain conditions).

Finally, in §6, we discuss applications of our approach to other type of random hyperbolic systems: random compositions of uniformly expanding maps, or random two-dimensional piecewise hyperbolic maps.

2 Main theorem

2.1 A class of anisotropic Banach spaces introduced by Gouëzel and Liverani

The purpose of this subsection is to briefly summarize the main results from [Reference Gonzalez-Tokman and Quas26]. More precisely, we recall the properties of the so-called scale of anisotropic Banach spaces, on which the transfer operator associated to a transitive Anosov diffeomorphism has a spectral gap. The discussion we present here is relevant when building examples under which the abstract results of the present paper are applicable.

Let M denote a $C^\infty $ compact and connected Riemannian manifold. Furthermore, let T be a transitive Anosov diffeomorphism on M of class $C^{r+1}$ for $r>1$ . We denote the transfer operator associated with T by $\mathcal L_T$ . We recall that the action of $\mathcal L_T$ on smooth functions $h\in C^r(M, \mathbb R)$ is given by

$$ \begin{align*} \mathcal L_T h=(h\lvert \det (DT)\rvert^{-1})\circ T^{-1}. \end{align*} $$

Let us now briefly summarize the main results from [Reference Gonzalez-Tokman and Quas26]. Take $p\in \mathbb {N}$ , $p\le r$ and $q>0$ such that $p+q<r$ . It is proved in [Reference Gonzalez-Tokman and Quas26] that there exist Banach spaces $\mathcal B^{p,q}=(\mathcal B^{p,q}, \lVert \cdot \rVert _{p,q})$ and $\mathcal B^{p-1, q+1}=(\mathcal B^{p-1, q+1}, \lVert \cdot \rVert _{p-1, q+1})$ with the following properties.

  • By construction, $C^r(M,\mathbb {R})$ is dense in $\mathcal B^{i,j}$ for $(i,j)=\{(p,q), (p-1, q+1)\}$ .

  • By [Reference Gonzalez-Tokman and Quas26, Lemma 2.1], $\mathcal B^{p,q}$ can be embedded in $\mathcal B^{p-1, q+1}$ and the unit ball of $\mathcal B^{p,q}$ is relatively compact in $\mathcal B^{p-1, q+1}$ .

  • By [Reference Gonzalez-Tokman and Quas26, Proposition 4.1], elements of $\mathcal B^{p,q}$ are distributions of order at most q.

  • By [Reference Gonzalez-Tokman and Quas26, Lemma 3.2], multiplication by a $C^{k+q}$ function, $1\le k\le p$ , induces a bounded operator on $\mathcal B^{p,q}$ . Moreover, the action of a $C^r$ vector field induces a bounded operator from $\mathcal B^{p,q}$ to $\mathcal B^{p-1,q+1}$ .

  • Here $\mathcal L_T$ acts as a bounded operator on $\mathcal B^{i,j}$ for $(i,j)=\{(p,q), (p-1, q+1)\}$ . Moreover, for each $h\in \mathcal B^{i,j}$ and $\varphi \in C^j(M, \mathbb {R})$ , we have that

    $$ \begin{align*} (\mathcal L_T h)(\varphi)=h(\varphi \circ T), \end{align*} $$
    where we denote the action of a distribution h on a test function $\varphi $ by $h(\varphi )$ .
  • By [Reference Gonzalez-Tokman and Quas26, Lemma 2.2], there exist $A>0$ and $a\in (0,1)$ such that

    $$ \begin{align*} \lVert \mathcal L_T^n h\rVert_{p-1, q+1} \le A\lVert h\rVert_{p-1, q+1} \quad \text{for }n\in \mathbb{N} \text{ and }h\in \mathcal B^{p-1, q+1} \end{align*} $$
    and
    $$ \begin{align*} \lVert \mathcal L_T^n h\rVert_{p,q} \le Aa^n \lVert h\rVert_{p,q}+A\lVert h\rVert_{p-1, q+1} \quad \text{for }n\in \mathbb{N}\text{ and }h\in \mathcal B^{p, q}. \end{align*} $$
  • By [Reference Gonzalez-Tokman and Quas26, Theorem 2.3], $\mathcal L_T$ is a quasi-compact operator on $\mathcal B^{p,q}$ with spectral radius 1. Moreover, $1$ is the only eigenvalue of $\mathcal L_T$ on the unit circle. Finally, $1$ is a simple eigenvalue of $\mathcal L_T$ and the corresponding eigenspace is spanned by the unique S.R.B. measure for T.

2.2 Regularity assumptions

In this section, we state precisely our regularity assumptions and our main theorem. We start by fixing, once and for all, the system of $C^\infty $ coordinates chart to be $(\psi _i)_{i=1,\ldots ,N}$ , where $\psi _i:(-r_i,r_i)^d\to M$ , and such that the $X_i=\psi _i((-r_i/2,r_i/2)^d)$ cover M are given by the anisotropic norm construction (see [Reference Gonzalez-Tokman and Quas26]). We also let $\delta $ be the Lebesgue number of the previous cover. Recall the following fact: if T and S are $C^{r+1}$ maps from M to itself, such that $\sup _{x\in M}d_M(Tx,Sx)\le {\delta }/{2}$ , then one has: for any $i\in \{1,\ldots ,N\}$ ,

$$ \begin{align*}\mathcal J_S(i):=\{j\in\{1,\ldots,N\},~S(X_i)\cap X_j\not=\emptyset \}=\mathcal J_T(i),\end{align*} $$

and one may write

$$ \begin{align*}d_{C^{r+1}}(T,S)=\sum_{i=1}^N\sum_{j\in\mathcal J(i)}\|T_{ij}-S_{ij}\|_{C^{r+1}},\end{align*} $$

where $\mathcal J(i)=\mathcal J_S(i)=\mathcal J_T(i)$ and $T_{ij}=\psi _j^{-1}\circ T\circ \psi _i:(-r_i,r_i)^d\to (-r_j,r_j)^d$ is a map between open sets in $\mathbb R^d$ .

For an interval $0\in I\subset \mathbb R$ , we consider a $C^s$ mapping $\mathcal T:I\to C^{r+1}(M,M)$ , such that $T_0:=\mathcal T(0)(\cdot )$ is a $C^{r+1}$ , transitive Anosov diffeomorphism. Up to shrinking I, we may and do assume that for all $\varepsilon \in I$ , $T_\varepsilon :=\mathcal T(\varepsilon )(\cdot )$ is a $C^{r+1}$ Anosov diffeomorphism, and that $\sup _{\varepsilon \in I}d_{C^{r+1}}(T_\varepsilon ,T_0)\le {\delta }/{4}$ . In particular, for any $i\in \{1,\ldots ,N\}$ , the set

$$ \begin{align*}\mathcal J_\varepsilon(i):=\{j\in\{1,\ldots,N\},~T_\varepsilon(X_i)\cap X_j\not=\emptyset \}\end{align*} $$

is independent of $\varepsilon $ . We informally refer to this property by saying that ‘the maps $T_\varepsilon $ may be read in the same charts’.

Consider now a $\Delta>0$ , and set $V:=B_{C^s(I,C^{r+1}(M,M))}(\mathcal T,\Delta )$ , that is, we consider a small ball, in $C^s(I,C^{r+1}(M,M))$ topology, centered at $\mathcal T$ . Up to shrinking $\Delta $ , we may assume that for any $\mathcal S\in V$ , any $\varepsilon \in I$ , $ S_\varepsilon :=\mathcal S(\varepsilon )(\cdot )$ is an Anosov diffeomorphism, and that $\sup _{\varepsilon \in I}d_{C^{r+1}}(T_\varepsilon , S_\varepsilon )\le {\delta }/{4}$ . In particular, for any $i\in \{1,\ldots ,N\}$ , the sets

$$ \begin{align*}\mathcal J_{\mathcal S}(i):=\{j\in\{1,\ldots,N\},~ S_\varepsilon(X_i)\cap X_j\not=\emptyset \}\end{align*} $$

are independent of $\varepsilon $ and $\mathcal S$ both (i.e. they only depend on V).

We may now describe the type of perturbed cocycle we will consider in the following:

Hypothesis 1. Let $r>4$ , $s>1$ , and $0\in I\subset \mathbb R$ an interval; let $\mathcal T$ and $V\subset C^s(I,C^{r+1}(M,M))$ be as described previously. Furthermore, let $(\Omega ,\mathcal F, \mathbb P)$ be a probability space, $\sigma \colon \Omega \to \Omega $ an invertible, ergodic $\mathbb P$ -preserving transformation and consider a measurable mapping

$$ \begin{align*}\mathbf{T}\colon \Omega \to V\end{align*} $$

Set $T_{\omega ,\varepsilon }:=\mathbf {T}(\omega )(\varepsilon )( \cdot )$ , $\omega \in \Omega $ and $\varepsilon \in I$ .

Let us make a few comments on this assumption, based on the previous discussion.

  • We choose the neighborhood V sufficiently small so that for any $\omega \in \Omega $ , any $\varepsilon \in I$ , the collection of $T_{\omega ,\varepsilon }$ can all be read in the same coordinate charts and share the same set of admissible leaves. In particular, one may study their transfer operators on the same anisotropic Banach spaces.

  • Our assumption is tailored so that for each fixed $\omega \in \Omega $ , $\varepsilon \mapsto T_{\omega ,\varepsilon }$ is a smooth curve of Anosov diffeomorphisms, all close-by to a fixed one (namely, $T_{\omega , 0}$ ).

We are now in position to formulate our main result.

Theorem 1. Let $(T_{\omega ,\varepsilon })_{\omega \in \Omega ,\varepsilon \in I}$ be a parametrized cocycle of Anosov diffeomorphisms, satisfying Hypothesis 1. Then, by shrinking I if necessary, there exists a triplet of Banach spaces

$$ \begin{align*}\mathcal B_{ss} \subset \mathcal B_s\subset \mathcal B_w, \end{align*} $$

and for each $\varepsilon \in I$ a unique family $(h_{\omega }^\varepsilon )_{\omega \in \Omega }\subset \mathcal B_{ss}$ with the following properties:

  • $\omega \mapsto h_\omega ^\varepsilon $ is measurable for each $\varepsilon \in I$ ;

  • $h_\omega ^\varepsilon $ is a probability measure for $\varepsilon \in I$ and $\omega \in \Omega $ ;

  • $\mathcal L_{\omega , \varepsilon } h_\omega ^\varepsilon =h_{\sigma \omega }^\varepsilon $ for $\varepsilon \in I$ and $\omega \in \Omega $ , where $\mathcal L_{\omega , \varepsilon }$ denotes the transfer operator of $T_{\omega , \varepsilon }$ ;

  • the map $I\ni \varepsilon \mapsto h_{\omega }^\varepsilon \in L^\infty (\Omega ,\mathcal B_w)$ is differentiable at $0$ , and for $\phi \in C^{r}(M)$ , we have that

    (3) $$ \begin{align} \partial_\varepsilon\bigg[\int_M\phi \,dh_\omega^\varepsilon \bigg] \bigg{\rvert}_{\varepsilon=0}=\sum_{n=0}^\infty\int_M \partial_{\varepsilon}[\phi\circ T_{\sigma^{-n}\omega}^{n}\circ T_{\sigma^{-n-1}\omega,\varepsilon}] \bigg{\rvert}_{\varepsilon=0}\,dh_{\sigma^{-n-1}\omega}, \end{align} $$
    where $h_\omega :=h_\omega ^0$ , $\omega \in \Omega $ .

2.3 Examples

Here we give explicit examples of systems satisfying Hypothesis 1. In all instances, $r>4$ and $s>1$ .

Example 2. Let $q\in \mathbb N$ , $\Omega =\{1,\ldots ,q\}^{\mathbb Z}$ , endowed with a Bernoulli measure. Consider a family $(T_1,\ldots ,T_q)$ of (close-enough) $C^{r+1}$ Anosov diffeomorphisms of the d-dimensional torus $\mathbb {T}^d$ , where $p:\mathbb T^d\to \mathbb T^d$ is a $C^{r+1}$ mapping and $0\in I\subset \mathbb {R}$ is an interval. We set

(4) $$ \begin{align} \mathbf T(\omega)(\varepsilon,x):=T_i(x)+\varepsilon p(x),\quad\text{if}~\omega_0=i, \end{align} $$

where $x\in \mathbb T^d$ , $\varepsilon \in I$ , and $\omega =(\omega _n)_{n\in \mathbb Z}\in \Omega $ .

Example 3. Let $q\in \mathbb N$ , $\Omega =\{1,\ldots ,q\}^{\mathbb Z}$ , endowed with a Bernoulli measure. Consider a $C^{r+1}$ Anosov diffeomorphism T of $\mathbb {T}^d$ . Moreover, consider $p_1,\ldots ,p_q\ C^{r+1}$ mappings of $\mathbb T^d$ and $0\in I\subset \mathbb {R}$ an interval, Then we define, for $\varepsilon \in I$ , $x\in \mathbb T^d$ , and $\omega =(\omega _n)_{n\in \mathbb Z}\in \Omega $ , the random map

(5) $$ \begin{align} \mathbf T(\omega)(\varepsilon,x)= T(x)+\varepsilon p_i(x) \quad \text{if}~\omega_0=i. \end{align} $$

In both Examples 2 and 3, for each $\omega \in \Omega $ , $\mathbf T(\omega )\in C^s(I,C^{r+1}(M,M))$ . Furthermore, because for each $i\in \{1,\ldots ,q\}$ , the set $\{\mathbf {T}(\omega )=T_i+\varepsilon p\}$ (respectively, $\{\mathbf {T}(\omega )=T+\varepsilon p_i\}$ ) is the 1-cylinder $\{\omega _0=i\}$ , one easily checks that the map is measurable.

Example 4. We now consider the following setting: for $\delta>0$ , $\omega \in B_{\mathbb {R}^d}(0,\delta )$ (that is, randomly chosen with respect to Lebesgue measure) and $\varepsilon _0>0$ , we consider a $C^s$ -smooth curve of Anosov diffeomorphisms

$$ \begin{align*} I:=(-\varepsilon_0,\varepsilon_0) \ni \varepsilon \to T_\varepsilon\in C^{r+1}(\mathbb T^d,\mathbb T^d).\end{align*} $$

Finally, set

$$ \begin{align*}\mathbf T(\omega)(\varepsilon,x):= T_\varepsilon(x)+\omega, \quad x\in \mathbb T^d.\end{align*} $$

In this last instance, one easily checks that the map $\Omega \ni \omega \mapsto \mathbf T(\omega )\in C^s(I,C^{r+1}(M,M))$ is continuous and, thus, measurable.

3 Some abstract results

3.1 Quenched statistical stability for random systems

In this section, we formulate an abstract result regarding the statistical stability of certain random dynamical systems that applies, in particular, to random hyperbolic dynamics.

Let $(\Omega , \mathcal F, \mathbb P)$ be a probability space and consider an invertible transformation $\sigma \colon \Omega \to \Omega $ which preserves $\mathbb P$ . Furthermore, let $\mathbb P$ be ergodic.

Moreover, let $\mathcal B_w=(\mathcal B_w, \lVert \cdot \rVert _w)$ and $\mathcal B_s=(\mathcal B_s, \lVert \cdot \rVert _s)$ be two Banach spaces such that $\mathcal B_s$ is embedded in $\mathcal B_w$ and that $\lVert \cdot \rVert _w \le \lVert \cdot \rVert _s$ on $\mathcal B_s$ . Suppose that for each $\omega \in \Omega $ , $\mathcal L_\omega $ is a bounded operator both on $\mathcal B_w$ and $\mathcal B_s$ . In addition, assume that $\omega \to \mathcal L_\omega $ is strongly measurable on $\mathcal B_s$ , that is, that the map $\omega \mapsto \mathcal L_\omega h$ is measurable for each $h\in \mathcal B_s$ . For $\omega \in \Omega $ and $n\in \mathbb {N}$ , set

$$ \begin{align*} \mathcal L_\omega^n:=\mathcal L_{\sigma^{n-1} \omega}\circ \cdots \circ \mathcal L_{\sigma \omega}\circ \mathcal L_\omega. \end{align*} $$

We consider a fixed, non-zero $\psi \in \mathcal B_s^{\prime }$ that admits a bounded extension to $\mathcal B_w$ that we still denote by $\psi $ , and assume that there exist $D, \lambda>0$ such that

(6) $$ \begin{align} \lVert \mathcal L_\omega^n h\rVert_s \le De^{-\lambda n} \lVert h\rVert_s, \end{align} $$

for $\mathbb P$ -almost every $\omega \in \Omega $ , $n\in \mathbb {N}$ , and $h\in \mathcal B_s^0$ , where

(7) $$ \begin{align} \mathcal B_s^0=\{h\in \mathcal B_s: \psi(h)=0\}. \end{align} $$

Obviously, $\mathcal B_s^0$ depends on the choice of $\psi $ . However, this dependence has no bearing on our results (see Remark 5), so we do not make it explicit in the notation itself.

Consider now an interval $I\subset \mathbb {R}$ around $0\in \mathbb {R}$ and suppose that for $\varepsilon \in I$ , we have a family $(\mathcal L_{\omega , \varepsilon })_{\omega \in \Omega }$ of bounded linear operators on spaces $\mathcal B_s$ and $\mathcal B_w$ . Moreover, assume that $\omega \mapsto \mathcal L_{\omega , \varepsilon }$ is strongly measurable on $\mathcal B_s$ for each $\varepsilon \in I$ . Analogously to $\mathcal L_\omega ^n$ , for $\omega \in \Omega $ , $\varepsilon \in I$ , and $n\in \mathbb {N}$ , we define

$$ \begin{align*} \mathcal L_{\omega, \varepsilon}^n:=\mathcal L_{\sigma^{n-1} \omega, \varepsilon}\circ \cdots \circ \mathcal L_{\sigma \omega, \varepsilon}\circ \mathcal L_{\omega, \varepsilon}. \end{align*} $$

We set $\mathcal L_{\omega , 0}=\mathcal L_\omega $ and we suppose that there exist $C>0$ , $\lambda _1 \in (0,1)$ , and a measurable $\Omega ^{\prime } \subset \Omega $ satisfying $\mathbb P(\Omega ^{\prime })=1$ such that for each $\varepsilon \in I$ :

  • for each $\varepsilon \in I$ , $\omega \in \Omega ^{\prime }$ , $n\in \mathbb {N}$ , and $h\in \mathcal B_s$ ,

    (8) $$ \begin{align} \lVert \mathcal L_{\omega, \varepsilon}^nh\rVert_s \le C\lambda_1^n \lVert h\rVert_s+C\lVert h\rVert_w; \end{align} $$
  • for each $\varepsilon \in I$ , $\omega \in \Omega ^{\prime }$ , and $h\in \mathcal B_s$ ,

    (9) $$ \begin{align} \lVert (\mathcal L_{\omega, \varepsilon} -\mathcal L_\omega)h\rVert_w\le C\lvert \varepsilon \rvert \cdot \lVert h\rVert_s; \end{align} $$
  • for each $\varepsilon \in I$ , $\omega \in \Omega ^{\prime }$ , and $n\in \mathbb {N}$ ,

    (10) $$ \begin{align} \lVert \mathcal L_{\omega, \varepsilon}^n\rVert_w \le C; \end{align} $$
  • for each $\varepsilon \in I$ , $\omega \in \Omega ^{\prime }$ , we have that

    (11) $$ \begin{align} \psi(\mathcal L_{\omega, \varepsilon} h)=\psi(h) \quad \text{for each }h\in \mathcal B_s. \end{align} $$

We can assume without any loss of generality that $\Omega ^{\prime }$ is contained in a full measure set on which (6) holds.

Remark 5.

  • Observe that we can assume that $\Omega ^{\prime }$ is $\sigma $ -invariant because we can replace $\Omega ^{\prime }$ with $\Omega ^{\prime \prime }=\bigcap _{k\in \mathbb {Z}}\sigma ^k (\Omega ^{\prime })$ which is clearly $\sigma $ -invariant and also satisfies $\mathbb P(\Omega ^{\prime \prime })=1$ . Therefore, from now on we assume that $\Omega ^{\prime }$ is $\sigma $ -invariant.

  • We note that we can deal with the more general situation when $\Omega ^{\prime }$ is allowed to depend on $\varepsilon $ . However, because the current framework is sufficient for applications we have in mind and for the case of simplicity, we do not explicitly deal with this case.

  • The fact that almost every $\mathcal {L}_{\omega ,\varepsilon }$ shares a left eigenvector is the reason why the dependence on $\psi $ of the space $\mathcal B_s^0$ has no consequence for us. In our examples, $\psi $ will be $\psi (h):=h(1)$ for a finite-order distribution h (and where $1$ denotes the constant test function).

We first show that the above assumptions imply that all the perturbed cocycles $(\mathcal L_{\omega , \varepsilon })_{\omega \in \Omega }$ also satisfy the condition of the type (6) whenever $\lvert \varepsilon \rvert $ is sufficiently small. More precisely, we have the following auxiliary result.

Proposition 6. There exist $\varepsilon _0, D^{\prime }>0$ and $\lambda ^{\prime }>0$ such that

(12) $$ \begin{align} \lVert \mathcal L_{\omega, \varepsilon}^n h\rVert_s \le D^{\prime}e^{-\lambda^{\prime} n} \lVert h\rVert_s, \end{align} $$

for $\varepsilon \in I$ satisfying $\lvert \varepsilon \rvert \le \varepsilon _0$ , $\omega \in \Omega ^{\prime }$ , $n\in \mathbb {N}$ , and $h\in \mathcal B_s^0$ .

Proof. Let $\varepsilon _0>0$ be such that

(13) $$ \begin{align} \frac{C^4}{1-\lambda_1}\varepsilon_0<1/2, \end{align} $$

and take an arbitrary $\varepsilon \in I$ satisfying $\lvert \varepsilon \rvert \le \varepsilon _0$ .

As

$$ \begin{align*} \mathcal L_{\omega, \varepsilon}^n-\mathcal L_\omega^n=\sum_{k=1}^n \mathcal L_{\sigma^k \omega, \varepsilon}^{ n-k}(\mathcal L_{\sigma^{k-1} \omega, \varepsilon}-\mathcal L_{\sigma^{k-1} \omega})\mathcal L_\omega^{k-1}, \end{align*} $$

it follows from (8), (9), and (10) that

$$ \begin{align*} \begin{split} \lVert (\mathcal L_{\omega, \varepsilon}^n-\mathcal L_\omega^n) h\rVert_w &\le \sum_{k=1}^n \lVert \mathcal L_{\sigma^k \omega, \varepsilon}^{ n-k}(\mathcal L_{\sigma^{k-1} \omega, \varepsilon}-\mathcal L_{\sigma^{k-1} \omega})\mathcal L_\omega^{k-1}h\rVert_w\\ &\le C\sum_{k=1}^n \lVert (\mathcal L_{\sigma^{k-1} \omega, \varepsilon}-\mathcal L_{\sigma^{k-1} \omega})\mathcal L_\omega^{k-1}h\rVert_w\\ &\le C^2 \lvert \varepsilon \rvert \sum_{k=1}^n \lVert \mathcal L_\omega^{k-1}h\rVert_s\\ &\le C^2 \lvert \varepsilon \rvert \sum_{k=1}^n(C\lambda_1^{k-1}\lVert h\rVert_s+C\lVert h\rVert_w) \\ &\le C^3 \lvert \varepsilon \rvert \bigg{(}\frac{1}{1-\lambda_1} \lVert h\rVert_s+n \lVert h\rVert_w \bigg{)}, \end{split} \end{align*} $$

and, thus,

(14) $$ \begin{align} \lVert (\mathcal L_{\omega, \varepsilon}^n-\mathcal L_\omega^n) h\rVert_w \le C^3 \lvert \varepsilon \rvert \bigg{(}\frac{1}{1-\lambda_1} \lVert h\rVert_s+n \lVert h\rVert_w \bigg{)}, \end{align} $$

for $n\in \mathbb {N}$ , $\omega \in \Omega ^{\prime }$ , and $h\in \mathcal B_s$ . Thus, (6), (8), and (14) imply that

$$ \begin{align*} \begin{split} \lVert \mathcal L_{\omega, \varepsilon}^{ n+m} h\rVert_s &=\lVert \mathcal L_{\sigma^m \omega, \varepsilon}^n \mathcal L_{\omega, \varepsilon}^m h\rVert_s \\ &\le C\lambda_1^n \lVert \mathcal L_{\omega, \varepsilon}^m h\rVert_s +C\lVert \mathcal L_{\omega, \varepsilon}^m h\rVert_w\\ &\le C\lambda_1^n (C\lambda_1^m \lVert h\rVert_s+C\lVert h\rVert_w)+C(\lVert \mathcal L_\omega^{ m} h\rVert_w+\lVert (\mathcal L_{\omega, \varepsilon}^m-\mathcal L_\omega^m) h\rVert_w)\\ &\le C^2\lambda_1^{n+m}\lVert h\rVert_s+C^2 \lambda_1^n \lVert h\rVert_s+CDe^{-\lambda m} \lVert h\rVert_s+C^4 \lvert \varepsilon \rvert \bigg{(}\frac{1}{1-\lambda_1} +m \bigg{)} \lVert h\rVert_s, \end{split} \end{align*} $$

for $n, m\in \mathbb {N}$ , $\omega \in \Omega ^{\prime }$ , and $h\in \mathcal B_s^0$ . Hence (recall also (13)), we can find (by decreasing $\varepsilon _0$ if necessary) $a\in (0, 1)$ and $N_0\in \mathbb {N}$ (independent of $\varepsilon $ and $\omega $ ) such that

(15) $$ \begin{align} \lVert \mathcal L_{\omega, \varepsilon}^{ N_0}h \rVert_s\le a \lVert h\rVert_s, \end{align} $$

for $\omega \in \Omega ^{\prime }$ and $h\in \mathcal B_s^0$ .

On the other hand, it follows readily from (8) that

(16) $$ \begin{align} \lVert \mathcal L_{\omega, \varepsilon}^n \rVert_s \le 2C \quad \text{for }n\in \mathbb{N} \text{ and } \omega \in \Omega^{\prime}. \end{align} $$

Take now an arbitrary $n\in \mathbb {N}$ and write it as $n=mN_0+k$ for $m, k \in \mathbb {N} \cup \{0\}$ , $0\le k<N_0$ . It follows from (15) and (16) that

$$ \begin{align*} \begin{split} \lVert \mathcal L_{\omega, \varepsilon}^n h\rVert_s =\lVert \mathcal L_{\omega, \varepsilon}^{mN_0+k}h\rVert_s &\le 2C a^m \lVert h\rVert_s \\ &=2Ce^{-m \log a^{-1}}\lVert h\rVert_s \\ &=2Ce^{({k}/{N_0})\log a^{-1}}e^{-({n}/{N_0})\log a^{-1}}\lVert h\rVert_s \\ &\le 2Ce^{\log a^{-1}}e^{-({n}/{N_0})\log a^{-1}}\lVert h\rVert_s, \end{split} \end{align*} $$

for $\omega \in \Omega ^{\prime }$ , $n\in \mathbb {N}$ , $h\in \mathcal B_s^0$ . We conclude that (12) holds with

$$ \begin{align*} \lambda^{\prime}=\log a^{-1}/N_0>0 \quad \text{and} \quad D^{\prime}=2Ce^{\log a^{-1}}>0,\end{align*} $$

which are independent on $\varepsilon $ . The proof of the proposition is completed.

We are now in position to establish the existence of a random fixed point for the cocycle $(\mathcal L_{\omega , \varepsilon })_{\omega \in \Omega }$ whenever $\lvert \varepsilon \rvert \le \varepsilon _0$ .

Proposition 7. For each $\varepsilon \in I$ satisfying $\lvert \varepsilon \rvert \le \varepsilon _0$ , there exists a unique family $(h_\omega ^\varepsilon )_{\omega \in \Omega ^{\prime }} \subset \mathcal B_s$ such that:

  • $\omega \mapsto h_\omega ^\varepsilon $ is measurable and bounded, that is

    (17) $$ \begin{align} \sup_{\omega \in \Omega^{\prime}} \lVert h_\omega^\varepsilon \rVert_s<\infty; \end{align} $$
  • for $\omega \in \Omega ^{\prime }$ ,

    (18) $$ \begin{align} \psi(h_\omega^\varepsilon) =1; \end{align} $$
  • for $\omega \in \Omega ^{\prime }$ ,

    (19) $$ \begin{align} \mathcal L_{\omega, \varepsilon} h_\omega^\varepsilon =h_{\sigma \omega}^\varepsilon. \end{align} $$

Proof. Let $\mathcal Y$ denote the set of all measurable functions $v\colon \Omega ^{\prime } \to \mathcal B_s$ such that

$$ \begin{align*} \lVert v\rVert_\infty=\sup_{\omega \in \Omega^{\prime}} \lVert v(\omega)\rVert_s<\infty. \end{align*} $$

Then, $(\mathcal Y, \lVert \cdot \rVert _\infty )$ is a Banach space. Set

$$ \begin{align*} \mathcal Z:=\{v\in \mathcal Y: \psi(v(\omega))=1 \ \text{for }\omega \in \Omega^{\prime} \}. \end{align*} $$

Observe that $\mathcal Z$ is nonempty. Indeed, because $\psi $ is non-zero, there exists $g\in \mathcal B_s$ such that $\psi (g)=1$ . Set $v_0\colon \Omega ^{\prime } \to \mathcal B_s$ by $v_0(\omega )=g$ for $\omega \in \Omega ^{\prime }$ . Then, $v_0\in \mathcal Z$ . We claim that $\mathcal Z$ is a closed subset of $\mathcal Y$ . Indeed, let $(v_n)_n$ be a sequence in $\mathcal Z$ that converges to some $v\in \mathcal Y$ . Then, we have that

$$ \begin{align*} \lvert \psi(v_n(\omega))-\psi(v(\omega))\rvert \le \lVert \psi \rVert_s\cdot \lVert v_n(\omega)-v(\omega)\rVert_s\le \lVert \psi \rVert_s \cdot \lVert v_n-v\rVert_\infty, \end{align*} $$

for $n\in \mathbb {N}$ and $\omega \in \Omega ^{\prime }$ , where $\|\psi \|_s$ denotes the norm of $\psi \in \mathcal B_s^{\prime }$ . Hence, $\psi (v(\omega ))=1$ for $\omega \in \Omega ^{\prime }$ and, thus, $v\in \mathcal Z$ .

For $\lvert \varepsilon \rvert \le \varepsilon _0$ , we define a linear operator $\mathbb L^\varepsilon \colon \mathcal Y \to \mathcal Y$ by

$$ \begin{align*} (\mathbb L^\varepsilon v)(\omega)=\mathcal L_{\sigma^{-1} \omega, \varepsilon} v(\sigma^{-1}\omega), \quad \omega \in \Omega^{\prime}. \end{align*} $$

It follows from (16) (together with our assumption that $\omega \mapsto \mathcal L_{\omega , \varepsilon }$ is strongly measurable on $\mathcal B_s$ for each $\varepsilon $ ) that $\mathbb L^\varepsilon $ is a well-defined and bounded operator. Moreover, $\mathbb L^\varepsilon \mathcal Z\subset \mathcal Z$ . Indeed, for each $v\in \mathcal Z$ we have (using (11)) that

$$ \begin{align*} \psi((\mathbb L^\varepsilon v)(\omega))=\psi(\mathcal L_{\sigma^{-1} \omega, \varepsilon} v(\sigma^{-1}\omega))=\psi(v(\sigma^{-1}\omega))=1, \end{align*} $$

for $\omega \in \Omega ^{\prime }$ . Thus, $\mathbb L^\varepsilon v \in \mathcal Z$ .

Let us now choose $N\in \mathbb {N}$ such that $D^{\prime }e^{-\lambda ^{\prime }N}<1$ . It follows from (12) that

$$ \begin{align*} \begin{split} \lVert (\mathbb L^\varepsilon)^Nv_1-(\mathbb L^\varepsilon)^Nv_2\rVert_\infty &=\sup_{\omega \in \Omega^{\prime}} \lVert \mathcal L_{\sigma^{-N} \omega, \varepsilon}^N (v_1(\sigma^{-N} \omega)-v_2(\sigma^{-N} \omega))\rVert_s \\ &\le D^{\prime}e^{-\lambda^{\prime}N}\sup_{\omega \in \Omega^{\prime}} \lVert v_1(\sigma^{-N} \omega)-v_2(\sigma^{-N} \omega)\rVert_s \\ &\le D^{\prime}e^{-\lambda^{\prime} N} \lVert v_1-v_2\rVert_\infty, \end{split} \end{align*} $$

for $\lvert \varepsilon \rvert \le \varepsilon _0$ and $v_1, v_2\in \mathcal Z$ . Hence, $(\mathbb L^\varepsilon )^N$ is a contraction on $\mathcal Z$ and therefore, $\mathbb L^\varepsilon $ has a unique fixed point $v^\varepsilon \in \mathcal Z$ . Thus, the family $(h_\omega ^\varepsilon )_{\omega \in \Omega ^{\prime }}$ defined by $h_\omega ^\varepsilon :=v^\varepsilon (\omega )$ satisfies (17), (18), and (19).

In order to establish the uniqueness, it is sufficient to note that each family $(h_\omega ^\varepsilon )_{\omega \in \Omega ^{\prime }}$ satisfying (17), (18), and (19) gives rise to a fixed point of $\mathbb L^\varepsilon $ in $\mathcal Z$ , which is unique. The proof of the proposition is complete.

Set

$$ \begin{align*} h_\omega :=h_\omega^0 \quad \omega \in \Omega^{\prime}. \end{align*} $$

The following is our statistical stability result.

Theorem 8. Let $\varepsilon \in I$ , $|\varepsilon |\le \varepsilon _0$ . Then

(20) $$ \begin{align} \sup_{\omega \in \Omega^{\prime}} \lVert h_\omega^{\varepsilon} -h_\omega \rVert_{w} \le C|\varepsilon|\lvert\log(|\varepsilon|)\rvert, \end{align} $$

where $C>0$ is independent on $\varepsilon $ .

Before we establish Theorem 8, we need the following auxiliary result. Let $h^\varepsilon $ denote the family $(h_\omega ^\varepsilon )_{\omega \in \Omega }$ given by Proposition 7.

Lemma 9. We have that

(21) $$ \begin{align} \sup_{\lvert \varepsilon \rvert \le \varepsilon_0}\sup_{\omega \in \Omega^{\prime}} \lVert h_\omega^\varepsilon \rVert_s < \infty. \end{align} $$

Proof. We use the same notation as in the proof of Proposition 7. Take an arbitrary $u\in \mathcal Z$ . It follows from Banach’s contraction principle that

$$ \begin{align*} h^\varepsilon =\lim_{k\to \infty} ( \mathbb L^\varepsilon)^{kN} u, \end{align*} $$

for $\lvert \varepsilon \rvert \le \varepsilon _0$ . Fix now any $\varepsilon $ such that $\lvert \varepsilon \rvert \le \varepsilon _0$ . There exists $k_0\in \mathbb {N}$ such that

$$ \begin{align*} \lVert h^\varepsilon -( \mathbb L^\varepsilon)^{k_0N} u \rVert_\infty <1. \end{align*} $$

Hence, using (8) we have that

$$ \begin{align*} \lVert h^\varepsilon \rVert_\infty \le 1+ \lVert ( \mathbb L^\varepsilon)^{k_0N} u \rVert_\infty \le 2C\lVert u\rVert_\infty+1, \end{align*} $$

which readily implies the conclusion of the lemma.

We are now in a position to prove Theorem 8.

Proof of Theorem 8

Take an arbitrary $\varepsilon \in I$ such that $|\varepsilon |\le \varepsilon _0$ . Observe that

(22) $$ \begin{align} \lVert h_\omega^{\varepsilon} -h_\omega \rVert_w &=\lVert \mathcal L_{\sigma^{-n} \omega, \varepsilon}^n h_{\sigma^{-n} \omega}^{\varepsilon} -\mathcal L_{\sigma^{-n} \omega}^n h_{\sigma^{-n} \omega}\rVert_w \nonumber\\ &\le \lVert \mathcal L_{\sigma^{-n} \omega, \varepsilon}^n h_{\sigma^{-n} \omega}^{\varepsilon} -\mathcal L_{\sigma^{-n} \omega}^n h_{\sigma^{-n} \omega}^{\varepsilon}\rVert_w+\lVert \mathcal L_{\sigma^{-n} \omega}^n (h_{\sigma^{-n} \omega}^{\varepsilon}-h_{\sigma^{-n} \omega})\rVert_w, \end{align} $$

for each $n\in \mathbb {N}$ and $\omega \in \Omega ^{\prime }$ . It follows from (6) and (21) that there exists $\tilde D>0$ such that

(23) $$ \begin{align} \lVert \mathcal L_{\sigma^{-n} \omega}^n (h_{\sigma^{-n} \omega}^{\varepsilon}-h_{\sigma^{-n} \omega})\rVert_w \le \lVert \mathcal L_{\sigma^{-n} \omega}^n (h_{\sigma^{-n} \omega}^{\varepsilon}-h_{\sigma^{-n} \omega})\rVert_s \le \tilde De^{-\lambda n}, \end{align} $$

for $n\in \mathbb {N}$ and $\omega \in \Omega ^{\prime }$ .

On the other hand, it follows from (8), (9), and (10) that

$$ \begin{align*} \begin{split} &\lVert \mathcal L_{\sigma^{-n} \omega, \varepsilon}^n h_{\sigma^{-n} \omega}^{\varepsilon} -\mathcal L_{\sigma^{-n} \omega}^n h_{\sigma^{-n} \omega}^{\varepsilon}\rVert_w\\ &\quad\le \sum_{j=1}^n \lVert \mathcal L_{\sigma^{-n+j} \omega}^{n-j} (\mathcal L_{\sigma^{-n+j-1}\omega}-\mathcal L_{\sigma^{-n+j-1}\omega, \varepsilon})\mathcal L_{\sigma^{-n} \omega, \varepsilon}^{ j-1}h_{\sigma^{-n} \omega}^{\varepsilon} \rVert_w\\ &\quad\le C\sum_{j=1}^n \lVert (\mathcal L_{\sigma^{-n+j-1}\omega}-\mathcal L_{\sigma^{-n+j-1}\omega, \varepsilon})\mathcal L_{\sigma^{-n} \omega, \varepsilon}^{ j-1}h_{\sigma^{-n} \omega}^{\varepsilon}\rVert_w\\ &\quad\le C^2\lvert \varepsilon \rvert \sum_{j=1}^n \lVert \mathcal L_{\sigma^{-n} \omega, \varepsilon}^{ j-1}h_{\sigma^{-n} \omega}^{\varepsilon} \rVert_s\\ &\quad\le 2nC^3\lvert \varepsilon \rvert \cdot \lVert h_{\sigma^{-n} \omega}^{\varepsilon}\rVert_s. \end{split} \end{align*} $$

Hence, by (21) we have that

(24) $$ \begin{align} \lVert \mathcal L_{\sigma^{-n} \omega, \varepsilon}^n h_{\sigma^{-n} \omega}^{\varepsilon} -\mathcal L_{\sigma^{-n} \omega}^n h_{\sigma^{-n} \omega}^{\varepsilon}\rVert_w \le 2nC^3 \lvert \varepsilon\rvert \sup_{|\varepsilon|\le\varepsilon_0} \sup_{\omega \in \Omega^{\prime}} \lVert h_\omega^{\varepsilon} \lVert_s, \end{align} $$

for $\omega \in \Omega ^{\prime }$ and $n\in \mathbb {N}$ . We conclude from (22), (23), and (24) that

$$ \begin{align*} \begin{split} \sup_{\omega \in \Omega^{\prime}} \lVert h_\omega^{\varepsilon} -h_\omega \rVert_w &\le 2nC^3 \lvert \varepsilon \rvert \sup_{|\varepsilon|\le\varepsilon_0} \sup_{\omega \in \Omega^{\prime}} \lVert h_\omega^{\varepsilon} \lVert_s+\tilde De^{-\lambda n}, \end{split} \end{align*} $$

for $n\in \mathbb {N}$ . Taking $n={\lfloor } {\lvert \log (\lvert \varepsilon \rvert ) \rvert }/{\lambda }{\rfloor }$ , we conclude that (20) holds.

3.2 Quenched linear response for random dynamics

Observe that Theorem 8 gives the continuity (in the appropriate sense) of the map $\varepsilon \mapsto (h_\omega ^\varepsilon )_{\omega \in \Omega }$ in $\varepsilon =0$ . We are now concerned with formulating sufficient conditions under which the same map is differentiable in $\varepsilon =0$ .

In addition to requiring the existence of spaces $\mathcal B_w$ and $\mathcal B_s$ as in §3.1, we also require the existence of a third space $\mathcal B_{ss}=(\mathcal B_{ss}, \lVert \cdot \rVert _{ss})$ that can be embedded in $\mathcal B_s$ and such that $\lVert \cdot \rVert _s \le \lVert \cdot \rVert _{ss}$ on $\mathcal B_{ss}$ . As in §3.1, we assume that $\psi $ is a non-zero functional on $\mathcal B_s$ , and we shall also assume that it admits a bounded extension to $\mathcal B_w$ . We still denote its restriction (respectively, extension) to $\mathcal B_{ss}$ (respectively, $\mathcal B_w$ ) by $\psi $ . Furthermore, we let $(\mathcal L_{\omega ,\varepsilon })_{\omega \in \Omega ,\varepsilon \in I}$ be a family such that each $\mathcal L_{\omega ,\varepsilon }$ is a bounded operator on each of those three spaces. In addition, suppose that $\omega \mapsto \mathcal L_{\omega , \varepsilon }$ is strongly measurable on both $\mathcal B_s$ and $\mathcal B_{ss}$ for each $\varepsilon \in I$ .

In addition to (6), we also require that

(25) $$ \begin{align} \lVert \mathcal L_\omega^n h\rVert_{ss} \le De^{-\lambda n} \lVert h\rVert_{ss}, \end{align} $$

for $\mathbb P$ -almost every $\omega \in \Omega $ , $n\in \mathbb {N}$ , and $h\in \mathcal B_{ss}^0$ , where

$$ \begin{align*} \mathcal B_{ss}^0=\{h\in \mathcal B_{ss}: \psi(h)=0\}. \end{align*} $$

We define $\mathcal B_s^0$ and $\mathcal B_w^0$ in a similar manner. In particular, $\mathcal B_s^0$ is the same as in (7).

In addition, we also assume that there exist $C>0$ , $\lambda _1 \in (0, 1)$ , and a measurable $\Omega ^{\prime } \subset \Omega $ with the property that $\mathbb P(\Omega ^{\prime })=1$ and:

  • for each $\varepsilon \in I$ , $\omega \in \Omega ^{\prime }$ , $n\in \mathbb {N}$ , and $h\in \mathcal B_s$ , (8) holds;

  • for each $\varepsilon \in I$ , $\omega \in \Omega ^{\prime }$ , and $h\in \mathcal B_s$ , (9) holds;

  • for each $\varepsilon \in I$ , $\omega \in \Omega ^{\prime }$ , and $n\in \mathbb {N}$ , (10) holds;

  • for each $\varepsilon \in I$ , $\omega \in \Omega ^{\prime }$ , $n\in \mathbb {N}$ , and $h\in \mathcal B_{ss}$ ,

    (26) $$ \begin{align} \lVert \mathcal L_{\omega, \varepsilon}^n h\rVert_{ss} \le C\lambda_1^n \lVert h\rVert_{ss}+C\lVert h\rVert_s; \end{align} $$
  • for each $\varepsilon \in I$ , $\omega \in \Omega ^{\prime }$ , and $h\in \mathcal B_{ss}$ ,

    (27) $$ \begin{align} \lVert (\mathcal L_{\omega, \varepsilon} -\mathcal L_\omega)h\rVert_{s}\le C\lvert \varepsilon \rvert \lVert h\rVert_{ss}; \end{align} $$
  • for each $\varepsilon \in I$ and $\omega \in \Omega ^{\prime }$ , we have that for $h\in \mathcal B_{s}$ (and, thus, also for $h\in \mathcal B_{ss}$ )

    (28) $$ \begin{align} \psi(\mathcal L_{\omega, \varepsilon} h)=\psi(h). \end{align} $$

As before, we can assume that $\Omega ^{\prime }$ is contained in a full-measure set on which (6) and (25) hold and that $\Omega ^{\prime }$ is $\sigma $ -invariant.

The following is a direct consequence of Proposition 6 (applied for the pairs $(\mathcal B_s, \mathcal B_{ss})$ and $(\mathcal B_w, \mathcal B_s)$ ).

Lemma 10. There exist $\varepsilon _0, D^{\prime }>0$ and $\lambda ^{\prime }>0$ such that for $\varepsilon \in I$ satisfying $\lvert \varepsilon \rvert \le \varepsilon _0$ , $\omega \in \Omega ^{\prime }$ , and $n\in \mathbb {N}$ , we have that

(29) $$ \begin{align} \lVert \mathcal L_{\omega,\varepsilon}^n h\rVert_{ss} \le D^{\prime}e^{-\lambda^{\prime} n} \lVert h\rVert_{ss} \quad \text{for }h\in \mathcal B_{ss}^0, \end{align} $$

and

(30) $$ \begin{align} \lVert \mathcal L_{\omega,\varepsilon}^n h\rVert_{s} \le D^{\prime}e^{-\lambda^{\prime} n} \lVert h\rVert_{s} \quad \text{for }h\in \mathcal B_{s}^0. \end{align} $$

By applying Proposition 7 for $\mathcal B_{ss}$ instead of $\mathcal B_s$ , we deduce the following result.

Proposition 11. For each $\varepsilon $ satisfying $\lvert \varepsilon \rvert \le \varepsilon _0$ , there exists a unique family $(h_\omega ^\varepsilon )_{\omega \in \Omega ^{\prime }} \subset \mathcal B_{ss}$ such that:

  • $\omega \mapsto h_\omega ^\varepsilon $ is measurable and bounded, that is

    (31) $$ \begin{align} \sup_{\omega \in \Omega^{\prime}} \lVert h_\omega^\varepsilon \rVert_{ss}<\infty; \end{align} $$
  • for $\omega \in \Omega ^{\prime }$ ,

    (32) $$ \begin{align} \psi(h_\omega^\varepsilon )=1; \end{align} $$
  • for $\omega \in \Omega ^{\prime }$ ,

    (33) $$ \begin{align} \mathcal L_{\omega, \varepsilon} h_\omega^\varepsilon =h_{\sigma \omega}^\varepsilon. \end{align} $$

Let us now introduce some additional assumptions. We suppose that for $\omega \in \Omega ^{\prime }$ , there exists a bounded linear operator $\hat {\mathcal L}_\omega \colon \mathcal B_{ss} \to \mathcal B_s$ , admitting a bounded extension (which will also be denoted by $\hat {\mathcal {L}}_{\omega }$ ) from $\mathcal B_s$ to $\mathcal B_w$ , and such that

(34) $$ \begin{align} \left \{ \begin{aligned} \sup_{\omega \in \Omega^{\prime}} \lVert \hat{\mathcal L}_\omega\rVert_{\mathcal B_{ss} \to \mathcal B_s}&<\infty,\\ \sup_{\omega \in \Omega^{\prime}} \lVert \hat{\mathcal L}_\omega\rVert_{\mathcal B_{s} \to \mathcal B_w}&<\infty, \end{aligned} \right. \end{align} $$

and we suppose that there is a function $\alpha :I\to \mathbb R_+$ , $\lim _{\varepsilon \to 0} \alpha (\varepsilon )=0$ such that for $\omega \in \Omega ^{\prime }$ ,

(35) $$ \begin{align} \bigg{\lVert } \frac{1}{\varepsilon}(\mathcal L_{\omega, \varepsilon}-\mathcal L_\omega)h-\hat{\mathcal L}_\omega h \bigg{\rVert}_{w}\le \alpha(\varepsilon)\|h\|_{ss} \quad \text{for }h\in \mathcal B_{ss}\text{ and }\varepsilon \in I\setminus \{0\}. \end{align} $$

We emphasize that the inequality (35) only holds in $\mathcal {B}_w$ -topology. Obviously, $\hat {\mathcal L}_\omega \mathcal B_{ss}^0\subset \mathcal B_s^0$ , for $\omega \in \Omega ^{\prime }$ , but it also follows from (35) and boundedness of $\psi $ on $\mathcal B_w$ that $\hat {\mathcal {L}}_\omega :\mathcal B_{ss}\to \mathcal B_s^0$ .

Finally, we assume that for $\omega \in \Omega ^{\prime }$ and every $n\in \mathbb {N}$ ,

(36) $$ \begin{align} \lVert \mathcal L_{\omega}^ nh\rVert_{w}\le D^{\prime}e^{-\lambda^{\prime}n}\|h\|_w \quad \text{for }h\in \mathcal B_{w}^0. \end{align} $$

We continue to denote $h_\omega ^0$ simply by $h_\omega $ . For $\omega \in \Omega ^{\prime }$ , set

(37) $$ \begin{align} \hat{h}_\omega:=\sum_{j=0}^\infty \mathcal L_{\sigma^{-j}\omega}^j \hat{\mathcal L}_{\sigma^{-(j+1)} \omega}h_{\sigma^{-(j+1)}\omega}. \end{align} $$

It follows from (6), (31), (34), and the previous discussion that $\hat {h}_\omega \in \mathcal B_s^0$ for $\omega \in \Omega ^{\prime }$ . In addition,

(38) $$ \begin{align} \sup_{\omega \in \Omega^{\prime}}\lVert \hat h_\omega\rVert_s <\infty. \end{align} $$

The following is our linear response result.

Theorem 12. We have that

(39) $$ \begin{align} \lim_{\varepsilon \to 0}\sup_{\omega \in \Omega^{\prime}}\bigg{\lVert} \frac{1}{\varepsilon}(h_\omega^{\varepsilon}-h_\omega) -\hat{h}_\omega \bigg{\rVert}_{w}=0. \end{align} $$

Proof. Let us begin by introducing some auxiliary notation. Set

$$ \begin{align*} \tilde{h}^{\varepsilon}_\omega:=h_\omega^{\varepsilon}-h_\omega \quad \text{and} \quad \tilde{\mathcal L}_{\omega, \varepsilon}:=\mathcal L_{\omega, \varepsilon}-\mathcal L_\omega. \end{align*} $$

It follows easily from (33) that

$$ \begin{align*} \tilde{h}_\omega^{\varepsilon}-\mathcal L_{\sigma^{-1} \omega} \tilde{h}_{\sigma^{-1} \omega}^{\varepsilon} =\tilde{\mathcal L}_{\sigma^{-1} \omega, \varepsilon} h_{\sigma^{-1} \omega}^\varepsilon, \end{align*} $$

and, thus,

(40) $$ \begin{align} \tilde{h}_\omega^{\varepsilon}=\sum_{j=0}^\infty \mathcal L_{\sigma^{-j} \omega}^ j\tilde{\mathcal L}_{\sigma^{-(j+1)}\omega, \varepsilon} h_{\sigma^{-(j+1)} \omega}^\varepsilon, \end{align} $$

for $\omega \in \Omega ^{\prime }$ . By (37) and (40), we have that

(41) $$ \begin{align} \bigg{\lVert} \frac{1}{\varepsilon}\tilde{h}_\omega^{\varepsilon} -\hat{h}_\omega \bigg{\rVert}_{w} &=\bigg{\lVert}\frac{1}{\varepsilon}\sum_{j=0}^\infty \mathcal L_{\sigma^{-j} \omega}^ j\tilde{\mathcal L}_{\sigma^{-(j+1)}\omega, \varepsilon} h_{\sigma^{-(j+1)} \omega}^\varepsilon-\hat{h}_\omega \bigg{\rVert}_{w} \nonumber\\ &\le \bigg{\lVert}\sum_{j=0}^\infty\mathcal L_{\sigma^{-j} \omega}^j \bigg{(} \frac{1}{\varepsilon} \tilde{\mathcal L}_{\sigma^{-(j+1)}\omega, \varepsilon} -\hat{\mathcal L}_{\sigma^{-(j+1)} \omega} \bigg{)}h_{\sigma^{-(j+1)}\omega}^\varepsilon \bigg{\rVert}_{w} \nonumber\\ &\phantom{\le}+\bigg{\lVert} \sum_{j=0}^\infty\mathcal L_{\sigma^{-j} \omega}^j\hat{\mathcal L}_{\sigma^{-(j+1)} \omega} \bigg{(}h_{\sigma^{-(j+1)}\omega}^\varepsilon-h_{\sigma^{-(j+1)}\omega}\bigg{)} \bigg{\rVert}_{w}. \end{align} $$

By applying Lemma 9, we have

$$ \begin{align*}\sup_{|\varepsilon|\le\varepsilon_0}\sup_{\omega \in \Omega^{\prime}}\|h_\omega^\varepsilon\|_{ss}<\infty. \end{align*} $$

This, together with (35) and (36) implies that

(42) $$ \begin{align} &\bigg{\lVert}\sum_{j=0}^\infty\mathcal L_{\sigma^{-j} \omega}^j \bigg{(} \frac{1}{\varepsilon} \tilde{\mathcal L}_{\sigma^{-(j+1)}\omega, \varepsilon} -\hat{\mathcal L}_{\sigma^{-(j+1)} \omega} \bigg{)}h_{\sigma^{-(j+1)}\omega}^\varepsilon \bigg{\rVert}_{w} \nonumber\\ &\quad\le \sum_{j=0}^\infty D^{\prime}e^{-\lambda^{\prime} j}\bigg{\lVert} \bigg{(} \frac{1}{\varepsilon} \tilde{\mathcal L}_{\sigma^{-(j+1)}\omega, \varepsilon} -\hat{\mathcal L}_{\sigma^{-(j+1)} \omega} \bigg{)}h_{\sigma^{-(j+1)}\omega}^\varepsilon \bigg{\rVert}_w \nonumber\\ &\quad\le \tilde D\alpha(\varepsilon)\sup_{|\varepsilon|\le\varepsilon_0}\sup_{\omega\in\Omega^{\prime}}\|h_\omega^\varepsilon\|_{ss}, \end{align} $$

for $\omega \in \Omega ^{\prime }$ , where $\tilde D>0$ does not depend on $\omega $ and $\varepsilon $ . On the other hand, we have by (34) and (36) that

$$ \begin{align*} \begin{aligned} &\bigg{\lVert} \sum_{j=0}^\infty\mathcal L_{\sigma^{-j} \omega}^j\hat{\mathcal L}_{\sigma^{-(j+1)} \omega} {(}h_{\sigma^{-(j+1)}\omega}^\varepsilon-h_{\sigma^{-(j+1)}\omega}{)} \bigg{\rVert}_{w} \\ &\quad\le \sum_{j=0}^{\infty}D^{\prime}e^{-\lambda^{\prime}j}{\lVert} \hat{\mathcal L}_{\sigma^{-(j+1)} \omega} (h_{\sigma^{-(j+1)}\omega}^\varepsilon-h_{\sigma^{-(j+1)}\omega} ) {\rVert}_w \\ &\quad\le\sup_{\omega \in \Omega^{\prime}}\|\hat{\mathcal{L}}_\omega\|_{\mathcal B_s\to \mathcal B_w}\sum_{j=0}^{\infty}D^{\prime}e^{-\lambda^{\prime}j}{\lVert} h_{\sigma^{-(j+1)}\omega}^\varepsilon-h_{\sigma^{-(j+1)}\omega}{\rVert}_s. \end{aligned} \end{align*} $$

Now, our assumptions ensure that we may apply Theorem 8 for the pair $(\mathcal B_{s},\mathcal B_{ss})$ . Hence, we obtain

(43) $$ \begin{align} \bigg{\lVert}\sum_{j=0}^\infty\mathcal L_{\sigma^{-j} \omega}^j\hat{\mathcal L}_{\sigma^{-(j+1)} \omega}(h_{\sigma^{-(j+1)}\omega}^\varepsilon- h_{\sigma^{-(j+1)}\omega})\bigg{\rVert}_w\le C^{\prime}|\varepsilon|\lvert\log|\varepsilon\rvert \end{align} $$

for $\omega \in \Omega ^{\prime }$ , where $C^{\prime }>0$ is independent on $\omega $ and $\varepsilon $ . It follows readily from (41), (42), and (43) that (39) holds, which completes the proof of the theorem.

Remark 13. The purpose of this remark is to interpret Theorem 8 (as well as Theorem 12) in the context of the multiplicative ergodic theory. In order to do so, we first need to introduce two additional assumptions. Namely, we require that:

  • $\mathcal B_s$ is separable;

  • the inclusion $\mathcal B_s \hookrightarrow \mathcal B_w$ is compact.

We denote the largest Lyapunov exponent of the cocycle $(\mathcal L_{\omega , \varepsilon })_{\omega \in \Omega }$ , for $\varepsilon \in I$ , by $\Lambda (\varepsilon )\in \mathbb R\cup \{-\infty \}$ . We stress that the existence of $\Lambda (\varepsilon )$ is a direct consequence of (8) (applied to $n=1$ ) and the subadditive ergodic theorem. Moreover, we recall that

$$ \begin{align*} \Lambda(\varepsilon)=\lim_{n\to \infty} \frac 1 n \log \lVert \mathcal L_{\omega, \varepsilon}^n \rVert_s \quad \text{for }\mathbb P\text{-almost every }\omega \in \Omega. \end{align*} $$

By using (8) together with Proposition 7, it is easy to show (see the proof of [Reference Demers and Zhang19, Lemma 3.5]) that $\Lambda (\varepsilon )=0$ , for $\varepsilon \in I$ with $|\varepsilon | \le \varepsilon _0$ . Moreover, for each such $\varepsilon $ , the cocycle $(\mathcal L_{\omega , \varepsilon })_{\omega \in \Omega }$ is quasi-compact (in the sense of [Reference Galatolo and Sedro25, Definition 2.7]). Hence, it follows from the multiplicative ergodic theorem (see [Reference Galatolo and Sedro25, Theorem A]) that for each $\varepsilon \in I$ with $|\varepsilon | \le \varepsilon _0$ , there exists:

  • $1\le l=l(\varepsilon )\le \infty $ and a sequence of exceptional Lyapunov exponents

    $$ \begin{align*}0=\Lambda (\varepsilon)=\lambda_1(\varepsilon)>\lambda_2(\varepsilon)>\cdots>\lambda_l(\varepsilon)>\kappa (\varepsilon)\end{align*} $$
    or in the case $l=\infty $ ,
    $$ \begin{align*}0=\Lambda (\varepsilon)=\lambda_1(\varepsilon)>\lambda_2(\varepsilon)>\cdots \quad \text{with }\lim_{n\to\infty} \lambda_n(\varepsilon)=\kappa (\varepsilon); \end{align*} $$
  • a unique measurable Oseledets splitting

    $$ \begin{align*}\mathcal{B}_s=\bigg(\bigoplus_{j=1}^l Y_j^\varepsilon(\omega)\bigg)\oplus V^\varepsilon(\omega),\end{align*} $$
    where each component of the splitting is equivariant under $\mathcal {L}_{\omega , \varepsilon }$ , that is, $\mathcal L_{\omega , \varepsilon }(Y_j^\varepsilon (\omega ))= Y_j^\varepsilon (\sigma \omega )$ and $\mathcal L_{\omega , \varepsilon }(V^\varepsilon (\omega ))\subset V^\varepsilon (\sigma \omega )$ ; the subspaces $Y_j^\varepsilon (\omega )$ are finite-dimensional and for each $y\in Y_j^\varepsilon (\omega )\setminus \{0\}$ ,
    $$ \begin{align*}\lim_{n\to\infty}\frac 1n\log\|\mathcal L_{\omega, \varepsilon}^n y\|=\lambda_j(\varepsilon);\end{align*} $$
    moreover, for $y\in V(\omega )$ , $\lim _{n\to \infty }(1/n)\log \|\mathcal L_{\omega , \varepsilon }^n y\|\le \kappa (\varepsilon )$ .

It follows easily from Proposition 6 (see the proof of [Reference Demers and Zhang19, Proposition 3.6]) that $Y_1^\varepsilon (\omega )$ is one-dimensional and is spanned by $h_\omega ^\varepsilon $ , for each $\varepsilon \in I$ such that $|\varepsilon | \le \varepsilon _0$ .

Hence, Theorem 8 can be interpreted as a regularity result for the top Oseledets space of $(\mathcal L_{\omega , \varepsilon })_{\omega \in \Omega }$ . Namely, it shows that it is continuous in appropriate sense in $\varepsilon =0$ . Taking into account that Lyapunov exponents and corresponding Oseledets subspaces represent non-autonomous versions of the classical notions of an eigenvalue and the corresponding eigenspace, we conclude that Theorem 8 is a natural extension of statistical stability results concerned with deterministic systems. In a similar manner, Theorem 12 can be viewed as a non-autonomous generalization linear reponse result.

4 Proof of the main theorem

In this section, we prove Theorem 1 by showing that the assumptions of our abstract Theorems 8 and 12 are satisfied.

We place ourselves in the context of §2.2: we fix a small enough interval $0\in I\subset \mathbb R$ , and we consider a $C^s$ mapping $\mathcal T:I\to C^{r+1}(M,M)$ , such that $T_0:=\mathcal T(0)(\cdot )$ is a $C^{r+1}$ , transitive Anosov diffeomorphism.

We now let $\Delta>0$ and consider $V:=B_{C^s(I,C^{r+1}(M,M))}(\mathcal T,\Delta )$ . One has the following lemma.

Lemma 14. There exists $C>0$ , depending only on $\mathcal T$ and $\Delta $ , such that for any $\mathcal S\in V$ , any $\varepsilon \in I$ ,

(44) $$ \begin{align} d_{C^{r+1}}(S_\varepsilon,S_0)\le C|\varepsilon|. \end{align} $$

Proof. From the discussion in §2.2, it follows that for any $\mathcal S\in V$ ,

$$ \begin{align*}d_{C^{r+1}}(S_\varepsilon,S_0)=\sum_{i=1}^N\sum_{j\in\mathcal J(i)}\|S_{ij}(\varepsilon,\cdot)-S_{ij}(0,\cdot)\|_{C^{r+1}},\end{align*} $$

where we use the notation $S_{ij}(\varepsilon ,\cdot )=\psi _j^{-1}\circ S_\varepsilon \circ \psi _i$ for $j\in \mathcal J(i)$ . From the mean value theorem, one obtains $S_{ij}(\varepsilon ,\cdot )-S_{ij}(0,\cdot )=\int _0^\varepsilon \partial _\varepsilon S_{ij}(\eta ,\cdot ) \, d\eta $ and, hence,

$$ \begin{align*} \|S_{ij}(\varepsilon,\cdot)-S_{ij}(0,\cdot)\|_{C^{r+1}}&\le\int_0^\varepsilon\|\partial_\varepsilon S_{ij}(\eta,\cdot)\|_{C^{r+1}}d\eta\\ &\le C(\mathcal T,\Delta)|\varepsilon| \end{align*} $$

from which the conclusion follows.

We consider the following triplet of Banach spaces:

(45) $$ \begin{align} \mathcal B_{ss}=\mathcal B^{3,1}(T_0,M) \hookrightarrow \mathcal B_s=\mathcal B^{2,2}(T_0,M) \hookrightarrow \mathcal B_w=\mathcal B^{1,3}(T_0,M). \end{align} $$

We consider a measurable map $\mathbf {T}:\Omega \to V$ , and we write $T_{\omega ,\varepsilon }=\mathbf {T}(\omega )(\varepsilon )(\cdot )$ . Finally, we let $\psi $ be defined by $\psi (h)=h(1)$ , which is a bounded functional on all three spaces in (45).

Proof of Theorem 1

  1. (1) By Lemma 14 we have, for $\varepsilon>0$ , that $d_{C^{r+1}}(T_{\omega },T_{\omega ,\varepsilon })\le C|\varepsilon |$ , with C independent of $\varepsilon $ and $\omega $ . Hence, [Reference Gonzalez-Tokman and Quas26, Lemma 7.1] implies that (9) and (27) hold.

  2. (2) As T is transitive, the deterministic transfer operator associated with T has a spectral gap on all three spaces $\mathcal B_{ss}, \mathcal B_s$ and $\mathcal B_w$ . (Observe that $\mathcal B_w$ is compactly embedded into $\mathcal B^{0,4}$ .) Consequently, it follows from [Reference Crimmins13, Proposition 2.10] that by shrinking $\delta $ is necessary, we have that (6), (25) and (36) hold.

  3. (3) The uniform Lasota–Yorke inequalities (8), (10), and (26) may be established arguing as in [Reference Demers and Zhang19, §3.2] or [Reference Gonzalez-Tokman and Quas26, §7].

  4. (4) By arguments analogous to those in [Reference Demers and Zhang19, §3.1], one has that the cocycle $(\mathcal L_{\omega , \varepsilon })_{\omega \in \Omega }$ is strongly measurable on $\mathcal B_s$ and $\mathcal B_{ss}$ .

The previous arguments are enough to apply Proposition 7 and Theorem 8 to our situation, giving us an equivariant family $(h_{\omega }^\varepsilon )_{\omega \in \Omega } \subset \mathcal B_{ss}$ , that satisfies our statistical stability estimate (20) with respect to the norm $\|\cdot \|_{2,2}$ . We note that (see [Reference Demers and Zhang19, Proposition 3.3]) for $\varepsilon \in I$ , $h_{\omega }^\varepsilon $ is actually a positive probability measure on M for $\mathbb P$ -almost every $\omega \in \Omega $ .

What is now left to do is to establish the existence and required properties of the ‘derivative operator’. Following the lines of [Reference Gonzalez-Tokman and Quas26, §9], we systematically abuse notation and ignore coordinates charts.

Denote by $g_\omega (\varepsilon ,\cdot ):={1}/{|{\det} (DT_{\omega ,\varepsilon })|}$ the weight of the transfer operator $\mathcal {L}_{\omega ,\varepsilon }$ . Under our assumptions, when viewed in coordinates, the maps $\varepsilon \mapsto g_\omega (\varepsilon ,\cdot )\in C^r(M,\mathbb {R}^\ast )$ and $\varepsilon \mapsto T_{\omega , \varepsilon }(\cdot )^{-1}$ are of class $C^s$ , $s>1$ . In particular, we may, for $\phi \in C^r(M,\mathbb {R})$ , differentiate $\mathcal {L}_{\omega ,\varepsilon }\phi $ with respect to $\varepsilon $ and obtain

(46) $$ \begin{align} \partial_\varepsilon[\mathcal{L}_{\omega,\varepsilon}\phi]&=\mathcal{L}_{\omega,\varepsilon}(J_{\omega,\varepsilon}\phi+v_{\omega,\varepsilon}\phi), \end{align} $$
(47) $$ \begin{align} \partial_\varepsilon^2[\mathcal{L}_{\omega,\varepsilon}\phi]&=\mathcal{L}_{\omega,\varepsilon}(J_{\omega,\varepsilon}^2\phi+J_{\omega,\varepsilon}(v_{\omega,\varepsilon}\phi)+v_{\omega,\varepsilon}(J_{\omega,\varepsilon}\phi)\nonumber\\ &\quad+v_{\omega,\varepsilon}(v_{\omega,\varepsilon}\phi)+[\partial_\varepsilon J_{\omega,\varepsilon}]\cdot \phi+\partial_{\varepsilon}[v_{\omega,\varepsilon}\phi]), \end{align} $$

where

(48) $$ \begin{align} v_{\omega,\varepsilon}\phi&:=-D\phi(\cdot) \cdot [DT_{\omega,\varepsilon}(\cdot)]^{-1}\cdot\partial_\varepsilon T_{\omega}(\varepsilon,\cdot), \end{align} $$
(49) $$ \begin{align} J_{\omega,\varepsilon}&:=\frac{\partial_\varepsilon g_\omega(\varepsilon,\cdot)+v_{\omega,\varepsilon}g_{\omega}(\varepsilon,\cdot)}{g_\omega(\varepsilon,\cdot)}. \end{align} $$

Note that both of these expressions are, together with their first s-derivatives with respect to $\varepsilon $ , in $C^{r-1}(M,\mathbb {R})$ . We also denote by $v_{\omega ,\varepsilon }$ the $C^r$ vector field associated with the operator $v_{\omega ,\varepsilon }$ . As noted in §2.1, multiplication by $J_{\omega ,\varepsilon }$ and the action of $v_{\omega ,\varepsilon }$ induce the bounded operator from $\mathcal {B}^{i,j}$ to itself (respectively, $\mathcal {B}^{i,j}$ to $\mathcal {B}^{i-1,j+1}$ ), where $i+j<r$ , and the same goes for their derivatives with respect to $\varepsilon $ .

Furthermore, by our Assumption 1, $J_{\omega ,\varepsilon }$ and $v_{\omega ,\varepsilon }$ , as well as their derivatives with respect to $\varepsilon $ , are bounded uniformly in $\omega $ and $\varepsilon $ , that is,

$$ \begin{align*} \max\Big(\sup_{\omega\in\Omega}\sup_{\varepsilon\in I}\|J_{\omega,\varepsilon}\|_{C^{r-1}},\sup_{\omega\in\Omega}\sup_{\varepsilon\in I}\|\partial_\varepsilon J_{\omega,\varepsilon}\|_{C^{r-1}}\Big)&<\infty,\\ \max\Big(\sup_{\omega\in\Omega}\sup_{\varepsilon\in I}\|v_{\omega,\varepsilon}\|_{C^r},\sup_{\omega\in\Omega}\sup_{\varepsilon\in I}\|\partial_\varepsilon v_{\omega,\varepsilon}\|_{C^r}\Big)&<\infty. \end{align*} $$

For $\phi \in C^r(M,\mathbb {R})$ , set

(50) $$ \begin{align} \hat{\mathcal{L}}_\omega\phi:=\partial_\varepsilon[\mathcal{L}_{\omega,\varepsilon}\phi] {\rvert}_{\varepsilon=0}=\mathcal{L}_{\omega}(J_{\omega,0}\phi+v_{\omega,0}\phi). \end{align} $$

By our previous discussion, we conclude that (34) holds.

On the other hand, using Taylor’s formula we conclude that for $|\varepsilon |$ small enough,

$$ \begin{align*} \mathcal{L}_{\omega,\varepsilon}\phi-\mathcal{L}_{\omega}\phi-\varepsilon\hat{\mathcal{L}}_\omega\phi=\int_0^\varepsilon\int_0^\eta \partial_\varepsilon^2[\mathcal{L}_{\omega,\varepsilon}\phi] {\rvert}_{\varepsilon=\xi}\, d\xi \, d\eta. \end{align*} $$

By (48) and the following discussion,

$$ \begin{align*}\|\partial_\varepsilon^2[\mathcal{L}_{\omega,\varepsilon}\phi] {\rvert}_{\varepsilon=\xi}\|_{w}\le C\|\phi\|_{ss},\end{align*} $$

where $C>0$ independent of both $\omega $ and $\varepsilon $ . Hence, (35) is satisfied, and we may apply Theorem 12, which gives us that the map $\varepsilon \in I\mapsto h_{\omega }^\varepsilon \in L^\infty (\Omega ,\mathcal {B}_w)$ is differentiable at $\varepsilon =0$ . Moreover,

(51) $$ \begin{align} \hat h_\omega:=[\partial_\varepsilon h_{\omega}^\varepsilon] {\rvert}_{\varepsilon=0}=\sum_{n=0}^\infty\mathcal{L}^{(n)}_{\sigma^{-n}\omega}\hat {\mathcal{L}}_{\sigma^{-n-1}\omega}h_{\sigma^{-n-1}\omega}.\end{align} $$

To obtain (3), we note that, by the density of smooth functions in $\mathcal {B}^{i,j}$ and (35), $\hat {\mathcal {L}}_\omega $ , as a bounded operator from $\mathcal {B}^{i,j}$ to $\mathcal {B}^{i-1,j+1}$ , admits the representation (in fact, this formula defines a bounded operator from $\mathcal D^{\prime }_j$ to $\mathcal D^{\prime }_{j+1}$ , but we will not need it)

$$ \begin{align*}(\hat{\mathcal{L}}_\omega f)(\phi):=f(\partial_\varepsilon[\phi\circ T_{\omega,\varepsilon}] \rvert_{\varepsilon=0}),\end{align*} $$

for any $f\in \mathcal {B}^{i,j}$ and $\phi \in C^r(M, \mathbb {R})$ . Then, for $\phi \in C^{r}(M,\mathbb {R})$ we have that

$$ \begin{align*} \partial_\varepsilon\bigg[\int_M\phi \,dh_{\omega}^\varepsilon\bigg] \bigg{\rvert}_{\varepsilon=0}&=\partial_\varepsilon[h_{\omega}^\varepsilon(\phi)] \rvert_{\varepsilon=0}\\ &=\hat h_\omega(\phi)\\ &=\sum_{n=0}^\infty\mathcal{L}^{(n)}_{\sigma^{-n}\omega}\hat {\mathcal{L}}_{\sigma^{-n-1}\omega}h_{\sigma^{-n-1}\omega}(\phi)\\ &=\sum_{n=0}^\infty \hat {\mathcal{L}}_{\sigma^{-n-1}\omega}h_{\sigma^{-n-1}\omega}(\phi\circ T^{n}_{\sigma^{-n}\omega})\\ &=\sum_{n=0}^\infty h_{\sigma^{-n-1}\omega}(\partial_\varepsilon[\phi\circ T^{n}_{\sigma^{-n}\omega}\circ T_{\sigma^{-n-1}\omega,\varepsilon}] {\rvert}_{\varepsilon=0}), \end{align*} $$

which gives (3). This completes the proof of Theorem 1.

5 Applications

In this section, we present two applications of our main result. Let us assume that the assumptions in Hypothesis 1 hold. We consider the triplet of spaces given by (45). Furthermore, for $\varepsilon \in I$ sufficiently close to zero, let $(h_\omega ^\varepsilon )_{\omega \in \Omega }\subset \mathcal B_{ss}$ be as in §4. By shrinking I if necessary, we can assume that $h_\omega ^\varepsilon $ exists for $\varepsilon \in I$ and $\omega \in \Omega $ . Moreover, recall that $h_\omega ^\varepsilon $ is a probability measure on M for $\omega \in \Omega $ (see §4). As previously, we write $h_\omega $ instead of $h_\omega ^0$ .

5.1 Annealed linear response for hyperbolic dynamics

As a first application, we establish a form of an annealed linear response.

For $F \in L^\infty (\Omega ,C^r(M))$ and $\varepsilon \in I$ , we set

(52) $$ \begin{align} R(\varepsilon, F)=\int_\Omega \int_M F(\omega,x)\, dh_{\omega}^\varepsilon(x) \, d \mathbb P(\omega). \end{align} $$

The following is our annealed linear response result.

Theorem 15. The map $R:I\times L^\infty (\Omega ,C^r(M))\to \mathbb {R}$ is differentiable at every $(0, F)$ , $F \in L^\infty (\Omega ,C^r(M))$ . Furthermore, one has

(53) $$ \begin{align} \partial_\varepsilon[R(\varepsilon,F)] \rvert_{\varepsilon=0}&=\sum_{n=0}^\infty\int_\Omega\int_M \partial_\varepsilon [F_\omega\circ T^{n}_{\sigma^{-n}\omega}\circ T_{\sigma^{-n-1}\omega,\varepsilon}] {\rvert}_{\varepsilon=0}\, dh_{\sigma^{-n-1}\omega} \, d \mathbb P(\omega). \end{align} $$

Remark 16. The previous result can be interpreted as linear response for the stationary measure of the skew product

$$ \begin{align*}S_\varepsilon(\omega,x):=(\sigma\omega,T_{\omega,\varepsilon}x),\end{align*} $$

acting on $\Omega \times M$ . Indeed, the stationary measure $\mu _\varepsilon $ of this skew-product classically admits the disintegration along fibers

$$ \begin{align*}\mu_\varepsilon(A\times B)=\int_{A} h^\varepsilon_{\omega}(B)\,d\mathbb P(\omega),\end{align*} $$

for measurable $A\subset \Omega $ , $B\subset M$ . In particular, this justifies the ‘annealed’ terminology, because in the independent and identically distributed case, the measure defined on M by $\tilde \mu _\varepsilon (\cdot )=\mu _\varepsilon (\Omega \times \cdot )$ corresponds to the invariant measure of the Markov chain associated with our cocycle.

We also point out that one may use this interpretation to establish a linear response for a class of deterministic partially hyperbolic skew products: let us set $\Omega =\mathbb S^1$ , $\mathbb P=\text {Lebesgue}$ , and $\sigma (\omega )=\omega +\alpha \mod 1$ for some $\alpha \in \mathbb {R}\backslash \mathbb Q$ . Then, consider a family $(T_{\omega ,\varepsilon })_{\omega \in \mathbb S^1,\varepsilon \in I}$ of Anosov diffeomorphisms of $\mathbb T^2$ , for example,

$$ \begin{align*}T_{\omega,\varepsilon}(x_1,x_2):= \begin{pmatrix} 2 & 1\\ 1 & 1 \end{pmatrix} \begin{pmatrix} x_1\\ x_2 \end{pmatrix} + \begin{pmatrix} \omega\\ \omega \end{pmatrix} +\varepsilon \begin{pmatrix} \sin 2\pi x_1\\ \sin2\pi x_2 \end{pmatrix}. \end{align*} $$

This system clearly satisfies our Hypothesis 1 (note that it belongs to the class of Examples 4), and the skew product $S_\varepsilon $ acting on $\mathbb S^1\times \mathbb T^2\simeq \mathbb T^3$ is clearly a partially hyperbolic system (with central direction tangent to the first coordinate), exhibiting linear response by Theorem 15 and the previous discussion.

Proof of Theorem 15

Fix an arbitrary $F_0 \in L^\infty (\Omega ,C^r(M))$ . We claim that the derivative of R in $(0, F_0)$ is given by

(54) $$ \begin{align} DR(0, F_0)(\varepsilon, H)=\varepsilon\int_\Omega \hat h_\omega (F_0(\omega))\, d\mathbb P(\omega)+\int_\Omega h_\omega( H(\omega))\, d\mathbb P(\omega), \end{align} $$

for $(\varepsilon , H)\in \mathbb {R} \times L^\infty (\Omega ,C^r(M))$ , where $\hat h_\omega $ is given by (51). Indeed, observe that

$$ \begin{align*} \begin{split} & R(\varepsilon, F_0+H)-R(0, F_0)-\varepsilon\int_\Omega \hat h_\omega (F_0(\omega))\, d\mathbb P(\omega)-\int_\Omega h_\omega( H(\omega))\, d\mathbb P(\omega) \\ &\quad=\int_\Omega (h_\omega^\varepsilon-h_\omega-\varepsilon \hat h_\omega )(F_0(\omega))\, d\mathbb P(\omega)+\int_\Omega (h_\omega^\varepsilon-h_\omega)(H(\omega))\, d\mathbb P(\omega). \end{split} \end{align*} $$

Furthermore, the continuous embedding $\mathcal B^{p,q}\hookrightarrow \mathcal D^{\prime }_q$ entails that there is $C>0$ (independent on both $\omega $ and $\varepsilon $ ) such that

$$ \begin{align*} \begin{split} &\bigg |\frac{1}{\varepsilon} \int_\Omega (h_\omega^\varepsilon-h_\omega-\varepsilon \hat h_\omega )(F_0(\omega))\, d\mathbb P(\omega) \bigg |\\ &\quad \le C \lVert F_0\rVert_{L^\infty(\Omega,C^r(M))} \cdot \sup_{\omega \in \Omega}\bigg{\lVert} \frac{1}{\varepsilon}(h_\omega^{\varepsilon}-h_\omega) -\hat{h}_\omega \bigg{\rVert}_{w},\end{split} \end{align*} $$

and, thus, Theorem 12 implies that

$$ \begin{align*} \lim_{\varepsilon \to 0} \frac{1}{\varepsilon} \int_\Omega (h_\omega^\varepsilon-h_\omega-\varepsilon \hat h_\omega )(F_0(\omega))\, d\mathbb P(\omega)=0. \end{align*} $$

In addition,

$$ \begin{align*} \bigg\lvert\int_\Omega (h_\omega^\varepsilon-h_\omega)(H(\omega))\, d\mathbb P(\omega)\bigg\rvert \le C\lVert H\rVert_{L^\infty(\Omega,C^r(M))} \cdot \sup_{\omega \in \Omega} \|h_\omega^\varepsilon-h_\omega \|_w, \end{align*} $$

and, consequently, by applying Theorem 8 (for the pair $(\mathcal B_{s},\mathcal B_{w})$ ), we obtain that

$$ \begin{align*} \lim_{(\varepsilon,H)\to (0,0)} \frac{1}{\lVert H\rVert_{L^\infty(\Omega,C^0(M))}}\bigg\lvert\int_\Omega (h_\omega^\varepsilon-h_\omega)(H(\omega))\, d\mathbb P(\omega)\bigg\rvert=0. \end{align*} $$

Thus, (54) holds and the proof of the theorem is completed. In order to establish (53), one can argue as in the proof of formula (3).

5.2 Regularity of the variance in the central limit theorem for random hyperbolic dynamics

In this section, we provide an application of Theorem 12 to the problem of the regularity of the variance (under suitable perturbations) in the quenched version of the central limit theorem for random hyperbolic dynamics.

Let F be as in the previous subsection. For $\omega \in \Omega $ and $\varepsilon \in I$ , set

$$ \begin{align*}f_{\omega,\varepsilon}:= F_\omega- h_{\omega}^\varepsilon (F_\omega)=F_\omega -\int_M F_\omega \, dh_\omega^\varepsilon.\end{align*} $$

Set

(55) $$ \begin{align} \Sigma^2_\varepsilon &:=\!\int_\Omega\int_M f_{\omega,\varepsilon}^2(x)\,dh_{\omega}^\varepsilon(x)\,d\mathbb P(\omega)\nonumber\\&\quad+2\!\sum_{n=1}^\infty\int_\Omega\int_M f_{\omega,\varepsilon}(x)f_{\sigma^n\omega,\varepsilon}(T^n_{\omega,\varepsilon}x)\,dh_{\omega}^\varepsilon(x)\,d\mathbb P(\omega). \end{align} $$

Observe that $\Sigma ^2_\varepsilon \ge 0$ and that $\Sigma ^2_\varepsilon $ does not depend on $\omega $ . It is proved in [Reference Demers and Zhang19, Theorem B] that if $\Sigma _\varepsilon ^2>0$ , the process $(f_{\omega ,\varepsilon }\circ T^n_{\omega ,\varepsilon })$ satisfies $\mathbb P$ -almost surely a quenched central limit theorem. More precisely, for every bounded and continuous $\phi :\mathbb R\to \mathbb R$ and $\mathbb P$ -almost every $\omega \in \Omega $ , we have that

$$ \begin{align*}\lim_{n\to\infty}\int \phi\bigg(\frac{S_n(f_{\omega,\varepsilon})}{\sqrt n}\bigg ) \,dh_{\omega}^\varepsilon=\int\phi\, d\mathcal N(0,\Sigma^2_\varepsilon), \end{align*} $$

where

$$ \begin{align*}S_n(f_{\omega, \varepsilon}):=\sum_{k=0}^{n-1}f_{\sigma^k\omega, \varepsilon}\circ T_{\omega,\varepsilon}^k,\end{align*} $$

and $\mathcal N(0, \Sigma ^2_\varepsilon )$ denotes the normal distribution with parameters $0$ and $\Sigma _\varepsilon $ . Our goal is to establish the following result.

Theorem 17. Under the above assumptions, the map $\varepsilon \mapsto \Sigma ^2_\varepsilon $ is differentiable at $\varepsilon =0$ .

We start the proof by making a few remarks related to the map $\varepsilon \mapsto (f_{\omega ,\varepsilon })_{\omega \in \Omega }\in C^r(M)$ .

  • For each $\varepsilon $ , $\omega \mapsto f_{\omega , \varepsilon }$ is an element of $L^\infty (\Omega ,C^r(M))$ . Moreover, by Lemma 9 we have that

    (56) $$ \begin{align} \sup_{|\varepsilon|\le \varepsilon_0}\operatorname{\mathrm{esssup}}_{\omega\in \Omega}\|f_{\omega,\varepsilon}\|_{C^r}\leq \Big(1+\sup_{|\varepsilon|\le\varepsilon_0}\operatorname{\mathrm{esssup}}_{\omega\in\Omega}\|h_\omega^\varepsilon\|_{ss}\Big)\operatorname{\mathrm{esssup}}_{\omega\in\Omega}\|F_\omega\|_{C^r}. \end{align} $$
  • It is differentiable at $\varepsilon =0$ . Indeed, we have

    $$ \begin{align*}\frac{1}{\varepsilon}( f_{\omega,\varepsilon}-f_\omega)= \frac{1}{\varepsilon} ( h_\omega-h_\omega^\varepsilon) (F_\omega),\end{align*} $$
    which yields
    (57) $$ \begin{align} \operatorname{\mathrm{esssup}}_{\omega\in\Omega}\bigg|\frac{1}{\varepsilon}( f_{\omega,\varepsilon}-f_\omega)+\hat h_\omega (F_\omega)\bigg|\to 0, \end{align} $$
    as $\varepsilon \to 0$ , via Theorem 12. Here, we write $f_\omega $ instead of $f_{\omega , 0}$ .

The above observations together with Theorem 12 easily imply the following lemma.

Lemma 18. The map

$$ \begin{align*} \varepsilon \mapsto \int_\Omega\int_M f_{\omega,\varepsilon}^2(x)\,dh_{\omega}^\varepsilon(x)\,d\mathbb P(\omega) \end{align*} $$

is differentiable at $\varepsilon =0$ .

Proof. For $\varepsilon $ sufficiently close to zero, let $H(\varepsilon )\in L^\infty (\Omega ,C^r(M))$ be defined by

$$ \begin{align*} H(\varepsilon)(\omega)=f_{\omega, \varepsilon}^2, \quad \omega \in \Omega. \end{align*} $$

Then, the discussion preceding the statement of the lemma implies that the map H is differentiable at $\varepsilon =0$ . Now the conclusion of the lemma follows from Theorem 15 and the simple observation that

$$ \begin{align*} \int_\Omega\int_M f_{\omega,\varepsilon}^2(x)\,dh_{\omega}^\varepsilon(x)\,d\mathbb P(\omega)=R(\varepsilon, H(\varepsilon)), \end{align*} $$

with R given by (52).

We recall that (see §2.1) that for $h\in \mathcal B^{p,q}$ and $f\in C^q (M)$ , we can define $f\cdot h \in \mathcal B^{p,q}$ whose action as a distribution is given by

$$ \begin{align*} (f\cdot h)(\phi)=h(f\phi), \quad\text{for }\phi \in C^q(M). \end{align*} $$

Moreover, there exists $C>0$ (depending only on M) such that

$$ \begin{align*} \lVert f\cdot h\rVert_{p,q}\le C \lVert h\rVert_{p,q} \cdot \lVert f\rVert_{C^q}. \end{align*} $$

The above inequality is frequently used in what follows and, thus, we do not explicitly refer to it. Moreover, in what follows, $C>0$ denotes a constant which is independent on all parameters ( $\omega $ , n, etc.) involved.

Observe that

$$ \begin{align*}( f_{\omega,\varepsilon} \cdot h_{\omega}^\varepsilon )(f_{\sigma^n\omega,\varepsilon}\circ T_{\omega,\varepsilon}^{n})= \mathcal{L}_{\omega,\varepsilon}^n (f_{\omega,\varepsilon} \cdot h_{\omega}^\varepsilon) (f_{\sigma^n\omega,\varepsilon}). \end{align*} $$

In addition, $( f_{\omega ,\varepsilon } \cdot h_{\omega }^\varepsilon )(1)=h_{\omega }^\varepsilon (f_{\omega ,\varepsilon })=0$ . We now write

(58) $$ \begin{align} \frac{1}{\varepsilon}(\mathcal{L}^{n}_{\omega,\varepsilon}(f_{\omega,\varepsilon}\cdot h_{\omega}^\varepsilon) (f_{\sigma^n\omega,\varepsilon} )- \mathcal{L}_\omega^n(f_\omega \cdot h_\omega )(f_{\sigma^n\omega}))=(I)_{n,\omega, \varepsilon}+(II)_{n,\omega, \varepsilon}+(III)_{n,\omega, \varepsilon}, \end{align} $$

where

$$ \begin{align*} (I)_{n,\omega, \varepsilon}&:=\mathcal{L}_\omega^n (f_\omega \cdot h_\omega) \bigg ( \frac{1}{\varepsilon}(f_{\sigma^n\omega,\varepsilon}-f_{\sigma^n\omega}) \bigg),\\ (II)_{n,\omega, \varepsilon}&:= \frac{1}{\varepsilon}(\mathcal{L}_{\omega,\varepsilon}^n-\mathcal{L}_{\omega}^n)(f_{\omega}\cdot h_\omega) (f_{\sigma^n\omega,\varepsilon}),\\ (III)_{n,\omega, \varepsilon}&:= \mathcal{L}_{\omega,\varepsilon}^n\bigg ( \frac{f_{\omega,\varepsilon}\cdot h_{\omega}^\varepsilon-f_\omega\cdot h_\omega}{\varepsilon}\bigg )(f_{\sigma^n\omega,\varepsilon}). \end{align*} $$

Lemma 19. For each $n\in \mathbb {N}$ ,

$$ \begin{align*} \lim_{\varepsilon \to 0}\operatorname{\mathrm{esssup}}_{\omega \in \Omega} \lvert (I)_{n,\omega, \varepsilon}-\hat h_{\sigma^n \omega}(F_{\sigma^n \omega})\mathcal{L}_\omega^n (f_\omega \cdot h_\omega) (1) \rvert=0. \end{align*} $$

In addition, for $\varepsilon $ sufficiently close to zero, we have that

$$ \begin{align*} \operatorname{\mathrm{esssup}}_{\omega \in \Omega} \lvert (I)_{n, \omega, \varepsilon} \rvert \le Ce^{-\lambda n}. \end{align*} $$

Proof. The first assertion follows directly from (25), (56), and (57). In addition, observe that for $\varepsilon $ sufficiently close to zero,

$$ \begin{align*} \operatorname{\mathrm{esssup}}_{\omega \in \Omega} \lvert (I)_{n, \omega, \varepsilon}- \hat h_{\sigma^n \omega}(F_{\sigma^n \omega})\mathcal{L}_\omega^n (f_\omega \cdot h_\omega) (1) \rvert \le Ce^{-\lambda n}. \end{align*} $$

On the other hand, (25), (38), and (57) imply that

$$ \begin{align*} \operatorname{\mathrm{esssup}}_{\omega \in \Omega} \lvert \hat h_{\sigma^n \omega}(F_{\sigma^n \omega})\mathcal{L}_\omega^n (f_\omega \cdot h_\omega) (1) \rvert \le Ce^{-\lambda n}. \end{align*} $$

The above two estimates readily give the second assertion of the lemma.

Lemma 20. For each $n\in \mathbb {N}$ ,

(59) $$ \begin{align} \lim_{\varepsilon \to 0} \operatorname{\mathrm{esssup}}_{\omega\in\Omega}|(II)_{n,\omega, \varepsilon}- \hat{\mathcal{L}}_{n,\omega}(f_\omega \cdot h_\omega) (f_{\sigma^n\omega})|= 0, \end{align} $$

where

$$ \begin{align*}\hat{\mathcal{L}}_{n,\omega}=\sum_{k=1}^n\mathcal{L}_{\sigma^k\omega}^{n-k}\hat{\mathcal{L}}_{\sigma^{k-1}\omega}\mathcal{L}^{k-1}_{\omega}.\end{align*} $$

Furthermore, for $\varepsilon $ sufficiently close to zero, we have that

$$ \begin{align*} \operatorname{\mathrm{esssup}}_{\omega \in \Omega}\lvert (II)_{n, \omega, \varepsilon} \rvert \le Cne^{-\lambda^{\prime} n}. \end{align*} $$

Proof. In order to prove (59), we first claim that

(60) $$ \begin{align} \bigg\|\frac{1}{\varepsilon}(\mathcal{L}_{\omega,\varepsilon}^n-\mathcal{L}_\omega^n)(f_\omega \cdot h_\omega)-\hat{\mathcal{L}}_{n,\omega}(f_\omega \cdot h_\omega)\bigg\|_w\leq \tilde\alpha(\varepsilon), \end{align} $$

with $\tilde \alpha (\varepsilon )\to 0$ when $\varepsilon \to 0$ . Observe that

$$ \begin{align*} \frac{1}{\varepsilon}(\mathcal{L}_{\omega,\varepsilon}^n-\mathcal{L}_\omega^n)=\sum_{k=1}^n \mathcal{L}_{\sigma^k\omega,\varepsilon}^{n-k}\frac{\mathcal{L}_{\sigma^{k-1}\omega,\varepsilon}-\mathcal{L}_{\sigma^{k-1}\omega}}{\varepsilon}\mathcal{L}^{k-1}_{\omega}, \end{align*} $$

and, therefore,

$$ \begin{align*} \frac{1}{\varepsilon}(\mathcal{L}_{\omega,\varepsilon}^n-\mathcal{L}_\omega^n)-\hat{\mathcal{L}}_{n,\omega}&=\sum_{k=1}^n\bigg[\mathcal{L}_{\sigma^k\omega,\varepsilon}^{n-k}\frac{\mathcal{L}_{\sigma^{k-1}\omega,\varepsilon}-\mathcal{L}_{\sigma^{k-1}\omega}}{\varepsilon}-\mathcal{L}_{\sigma^k\omega}^{n-k}\hat{\mathcal{L}}_{\sigma^{k-1}\omega}\bigg]\mathcal{L}^{k-1}_{\omega}\\ &=\sum_{k=1}^n\bigg[(\mathcal{L}_{\sigma^k\omega,\varepsilon}^{n-k}-\mathcal{L}_{\sigma^k\omega}^{n-k})\frac{\mathcal{L}_{\sigma^{k-1}\omega,\varepsilon}-\mathcal{L}_{\sigma^{k-1}\omega}}{\varepsilon}\\ &\quad+ \mathcal{L}_{\sigma^k\omega}^{n-k}\bigg(\frac{\mathcal{L}_{\sigma^{k-1}\omega,\varepsilon}-\mathcal{L}_{\sigma^{k-1}\omega}}{\varepsilon}-\hat{\mathcal{L}}_{\sigma^{k-1}\omega}\bigg)\bigg]\mathcal{L}^{k-1}_{\omega}. \end{align*} $$

By the arguments in the proof of Proposition 6, (25), (27), and (56), we have that

(61) $$ \begin{align} &\bigg\|(\mathcal{L}_{\sigma^k\omega,\varepsilon}^{n-k}-\mathcal{L}_{\sigma^k\omega}^{n-k})\frac{\mathcal{L}_{\sigma^{k-1}\omega,\varepsilon}-\mathcal{L}_{\sigma^{k-1}\omega}}{\varepsilon}\mathcal{L}^{k-1}_{\omega}(f_\omega \cdot h_\omega)\bigg\|_w\nonumber\\ &\quad\leq C|\varepsilon|(n-k)\bigg\|\frac{\mathcal{L}_{\sigma^{k-1}\omega,\varepsilon}-\mathcal{L}_{\sigma^{k-1}\omega}}{\varepsilon}\mathcal{L}^{k-1}_{\omega}(f_\omega \cdot h_\omega)\bigg\|_s\nonumber\\ &\quad\leq C|\varepsilon|(n-k)e^{-\lambda(k-1)}\operatorname{\mathrm{esssup}}_{\omega\in\Omega}\|f_\omega \cdot h_\omega\|_{ss} \nonumber \\ &\quad\le C|\varepsilon |(n-k)e^{-\lambda k}. \end{align} $$

Similarly, using (25), (31), (35), (36), and (56), we obtain that

(62) $$ \begin{align} &\bigg\|\mathcal{L}_{\sigma^k\omega}^{n-k}\bigg(\frac{\mathcal{L}_{\sigma^{k-1}\omega,\varepsilon}-\mathcal{L}_{\sigma^{k-1}\omega}}{\varepsilon}-\hat{\mathcal{L}}_{\sigma^{k-1}\omega}\bigg)\mathcal{L}^{k-1}_{\omega}(f_\omega \cdot h_\omega)\bigg\|_{w}\nonumber\\ &\quad\leq Ce^{-\lambda^{\prime}(n-k)}\bigg\|\bigg(\frac{\mathcal{L}_{\sigma^{k-1}\omega,\varepsilon}-\mathcal{L}_{\sigma^{k-1}\omega}}{\varepsilon}-\hat{\mathcal{L}}_{\sigma^{k-1}\omega}\bigg)\mathcal{L}^{k-1}_{\omega}(f_\omega \cdot h_\omega)\bigg\|_{w}\nonumber\\ &\quad\leq Ce^{-\lambda^{\prime}(n-k)}\alpha(\varepsilon)\|\mathcal{L}^{k-1}_{\omega}(f_\omega \cdot h_\omega)\|_{ss} \nonumber \\ &\quad\leq Ce^{-\lambda^{\prime}n}\alpha(\varepsilon)\operatorname{\mathrm{esssup}}_{\omega\in\Omega}\|f_\omega \cdot h_\omega\|_{ss} \nonumber\\ &\quad\le C\alpha(\varepsilon)e^{-\lambda^{\prime} n}. \end{align} $$

Then, (61) and (62) imply (60).

Furthermore, (6), (25), (31), (34), and (56) imply that

(63) $$ \begin{align} \lVert \hat{\mathcal{L}}_{\omega,n}(f_\omega \cdot h_\omega) \rVert_w &\leq \sum_{k=1}^n\|\mathcal{L}_{\sigma^k\omega}^{n-k}\hat{\mathcal{L}}_{\sigma^{k-1}\omega}\mathcal{L}^{k-1}_{\omega}(f_\omega \cdot h_\omega)\|_{s}\nonumber\\ &\leq C\sum_{k=1}^n e^{-\lambda(n-k)}\operatorname{\mathrm{esssup}}_{\omega\in\Omega} (\|\hat{\mathcal{L}}_{\sigma^{k-1}\omega}\|_{B_{ss}\to B_s} \cdot \|\mathcal{L}^{k-1}_{\omega}(f_\omega \cdot h_\omega)\|_{ss})\nonumber\\ &\leq C\sum_{k=1}^n e^{-\lambda(n-k)}e^{-\lambda(k-1)}\operatorname{\mathrm{esssup}}_{\omega\in\Omega}\|f_\omega \cdot h_\omega\|_{ss} \nonumber \\ &\leq Cne^{-\lambda n}. \end{align} $$

Using Theorem 8, (56), (60), and (63), we have that

$$ \begin{align*} \begin{split} &\operatorname{\mathrm{esssup}}_{\omega\in\Omega}|(II)_{n,\omega, \varepsilon}- \hat{\mathcal{L}}_{n,\omega}(f_\omega \cdot h_\omega) (f_{\sigma^n\omega})| \\ &\quad\le \operatorname{\mathrm{esssup}}_{\omega \in \Omega}\bigg |\frac{1}{\varepsilon}(\mathcal{L}_{\omega,\varepsilon}^n-\mathcal{L}_\omega^n)(f_\omega \cdot h_\omega)(f_{\sigma^n \omega, \varepsilon})-\hat{\mathcal{L}}_{n,\omega}(f_\omega \cdot h_\omega)(f_{\sigma^n \omega, \varepsilon})\bigg | \\ &\qquad+\operatorname{\mathrm{esssup}}_{\omega \in \Omega} | \hat{\mathcal{L}}_{n,\omega}(f_\omega \cdot h_\omega) (f_{\sigma^n \omega, \varepsilon}-f_{\sigma^n \omega}) |\\ &\quad\le \tilde\alpha(\varepsilon)\operatorname{\mathrm{esssup}}_{\omega \in \Omega}\lVert f_{\sigma^n \omega, \varepsilon}\rVert_{C^r}+Cne^{-\lambda n} \operatorname{\mathrm{esssup}}_{\omega \in \Omega} | (h_\omega^\varepsilon -h_\omega)(F_\omega)| \\ &\quad\le C\tilde \alpha (\varepsilon)+Cn e^{-\lambda n} |\varepsilon | |\log (|\varepsilon |)|, \end{split} \end{align*} $$

which implies the first assertion of the lemma.

On the other hand, using (36) (which also persists under small perturbations), (31), (34), and (56), we have that for $\varepsilon $ sufficiently small,

(64) $$ \begin{align} \operatorname{\mathrm{esssup}}_{\omega \in \Omega}\bigg\|(\mathcal{L}_{\sigma^k\omega,\varepsilon}^{n-k}-\mathcal{L}_{\sigma^k\omega}^{n-k})\frac{\mathcal{L}_{\sigma^{k-1}\omega,\varepsilon}-\mathcal{L}_{\sigma^{k-1}\omega}}{\varepsilon}\mathcal{L}^{k-1}_{\omega}(f_\omega \cdot h_\omega)\bigg\|_w \le Ce^{-\lambda^{\prime}n}. \end{align} $$

Moreover, from (62) it follows that for $\varepsilon $ sufficiently small,

(65) $$ \begin{align} \operatorname{\mathrm{esssup}}_{\omega \in \Omega}\bigg\|\mathcal{L}_{\sigma^k\omega}^{n-k}\bigg(\frac{\mathcal{L}_{\sigma^{k-1}\omega,\varepsilon}-\mathcal{L}_{\sigma^{k-1}\omega}}{\varepsilon}-\hat{\mathcal{L}}_{\sigma^{k-1}\omega}\bigg)\mathcal{L}^{k-1}_{\omega}(f_\omega \cdot h_\omega)\bigg\|_{w} \le Ce^{-\lambda^{\prime} n}. \end{align} $$

By (64) and (65), we have that for sufficiently small $\varepsilon $ ,

$$ \begin{align*} \operatorname{\mathrm{esssup}}_{\omega \in \Omega}\bigg\|\frac{1}{\varepsilon}(\mathcal{L}_{\omega,\varepsilon}^n-\mathcal{L}_\omega^n)(f_\omega \cdot h_\omega)-\hat{\mathcal{L}}_{n,\omega}(f_\omega \cdot h_\omega)\bigg\|_w \le Cne^{-\lambda^{\prime} n}. \end{align*} $$

The above estimate together with (63) easily implies that the second assertion of the lemma also holds.

By using similar arguments, one can establish the following lemma.

Lemma 21. For each $n\in \mathbb {N}$ ,

$$ \begin{align*} \lim_{\varepsilon \to 0} \operatorname{\mathrm{esssup}}_{\omega \in \Omega} \lvert (III)_{n,\omega, \varepsilon} - \mathcal{L}_{\omega}^n(\hat h_\omega (F_\omega) h_\omega+f_\omega \cdot \hat h_\omega) (f_{\sigma^n\omega}) \rvert =0. \end{align*} $$

Moreover, for $\varepsilon $ sufficiently small, we have that

$$ \begin{align*} \operatorname{\mathrm{esssup}}_{\omega \in \Omega}\lvert (III)_{n, \omega, \varepsilon} \rvert \le Ce^{-\lambda^{\prime} n}. \end{align*} $$

The conclusion of Theorem 17 follows from previous lemmas and the dominated convergence theorem.

Remark 22. In [Reference Dolgopyat20] the authors have extended the results from [Reference Demers and Zhang19] to the case of vector-valued observables. In particular, the quenched version of the central limit theorem for vector-valued observables was established. In this setting, the variance is a symmetric matrix which is, in general, positive semi-definite (for the central limit theorem to hold it needs to be positive-definite). One can easily establish the version of Theorem 17 in this setting, essentially by repeating the arguments in the proof of Theorem 17 for each matrix component.

6 Application to other types of random systems

In this paper, we focused our efforts on studying (quenched) statistical stability and linear response for random compositions of Anosov diffeomorphisms. Nevertheless, our approach, or a slight modification thereof, is applicable to other types of random hyperbolic systems.

6.1 Random uniformly expanding dynamics

In this subsection, let us describe the application of Theorems 8 and 12 to a simple class of fiberwise perturbations of random compositions of uniformly expanding maps of the unit circle $\mathbb S^1$ . The setting is close to [Reference Gouëzel and Liverani24, §6]: consider a family $(D_\varepsilon )_{\varepsilon \in I}$ of diffeomorphisms of $\mathbb S^1$ (where $0\in I\subset \mathbb {R}$ is an interval), satisfying

$$ \begin{align*}D_\varepsilon= \text{Id}+\varepsilon S,\end{align*} $$

where $S:\mathbb S^1\to \mathbb {R}$ is a $C^{4}$ map. Letting $(\Omega ,\mathcal F,\mathbb P)$ be a probability space, endowed with an invertible, measure-preserving and ergodic map $\sigma :\Omega \circlearrowleft $ . We consider a measurable map $\omega \in \Omega \mapsto T_{\omega }\in C^4(\mathbb S^1,\mathbb S^1)$ such that:

  1. (1) there exists $\lambda>1$ such that for $\mathbb P$ -almost every $\omega \in \Omega $ , $\inf _{x\in \mathbb S^1}|T^{\prime }_\omega (x)|\ge \lambda $ ;

  2. (2) $\operatorname {\mathrm {esssup}}_{\omega \in \Omega }\|T_\omega \|_{C^4}\le \Delta $ for some small $\Delta>0$ .

We then set

$$ \begin{align*}T_{\omega,\varepsilon}:= D_\varepsilon\circ T_\omega \quad \text{for }\varepsilon \in I\text{ and } \omega \in \Omega,\end{align*} $$

and we review the assumptions of Theorems 8 and 12 for the spaces $\mathcal {B}_{ss}=W^{3,1}(\mathbb S^1)$ , $\mathcal {B}_s=W^{2,1}(\mathbb S^1)$ , and $\mathcal {B}_w=W^{1,1}(\mathbb S^1)$ .

  • Equations (8) and (10) are established in [Reference Crimmins and Nakano14, §5].

  • Equation (9) follows from [Reference Gouëzel and Liverani24, Proposition 35].

  • By applying [Reference Crimmins13, Proposition 2.10] (provided that $\Delta $ is sufficiently small), we conclude that (6) holds on $(\mathcal {B}_{ss},\mathcal {B}_s,\mathcal {B}_w)$ .

  • To define the derivative operator $\hat {\mathcal {L}}_\omega $ , we start by remarking that because $\mathcal {L}_{\omega ,\varepsilon }=\mathcal {L}_{D_\varepsilon }\mathcal {L}_\omega $ , one has (see [Reference Gouëzel and Liverani24, Eq. (51)]) that

    $$ \begin{align*}\hat{\mathcal{L}}_\omega=\bigg[\frac{d\mathcal{L}_{D_\varepsilon}}{d\varepsilon}\bigg] \bigg \rvert_{\varepsilon=0}\mathcal{L}_\omega=-(\mathcal{L}_\omega(\cdot)S)^{\prime}.\end{align*} $$
    It is easy to see that $\hat {\mathcal {L}}_\omega $ defines a bounded operator from $\mathcal {B}_{ss}$ to $\mathcal {B}_s$ (respectively, from $\mathcal {B}_s$ to $\mathcal {B}_w$ ) and satisfies (34).

    As for condition (35), we have for $\phi \in \mathcal {B}_{s}$

    $$ \begin{align*} \hspace{-3pt}\|\varepsilon^{-1}(\mathcal{L}_{\omega,\varepsilon}-\mathcal{L}_\omega)\phi-\hat{\mathcal{L}}_\omega\phi\|_w &\le \|\varepsilon^{-1}(\mathcal{L}_{D_\varepsilon}-\text{Id})+(\cdot S)^{\prime}\|_{\mathcal{B}_{s}\to\mathcal{B}_w}\operatorname{\mathrm{esssup}}_{\omega\in\Omega}\|\mathcal{L}_\omega\phi\|_{s}\\ &\le C\alpha(\varepsilon)\|\phi\|_{s} \end{align*} $$
    by using (8), with $\alpha (\varepsilon )=\|\varepsilon ^{-1}(\mathcal {L}_{D_\varepsilon }-\text {Id})+(\cdot S)^{\prime }\|_{\mathcal {B}_s\to \mathcal {B}_w}$ , which goes to zero as $\varepsilon \to 0$ by [Reference Gouëzel and Liverani24, Proposition 36].

6.2 Random piecewise hyperbolic dynamics

Let us discuss the application of Theorem 8 to random compositions of close-by piecewise hyperbolic maps, defined on a two-dimensional compact Riemann manifold X, as described in [Reference Demers and Zhang19, §10] and [Reference Demers and Liverani16, §2]. It is noteworthy that one cannot directly apply Theorem 8, because, as noted in [Reference Demers and Zhang19, §10.2.1], the transfer operator map $\omega \mapsto \mathcal {L}_\omega $ is not strongly measurable. Still, the conclusion of Theorem 8 holds; let us explain why.

In [Reference Demers and Liverani16, §2.4], the set $\Gamma _A$ of maps T satisfying the assumptions of [Reference Demers and Liverani16, §2], with second derivative $|D^2T|<A$ is introduced, as well as the distance $\gamma $ between two such maps.

Let us fix a (small enough) $\varepsilon _0>0$ , a $T\in \Gamma _A$ and let $X_{\varepsilon _0}:=\{S\in \Gamma _A: \gamma (T,S)<\varepsilon _0\}$ . We let $\mathcal {B}_s$ and $\mathcal {B}_w$ be the Banach spaces defined in [Reference Demers and Liverani16, §2.2] (where $\mathcal {B}_s$ is denoted $\mathcal {B}$ ). In particular, we recall that elements of $\mathcal {B}_s$ are distributions of order at most one. Letting $I:=[-\varepsilon _0/2,\varepsilon _0/2]$ , we set, for a fixed $L>0$ :

$$ \begin{align*}B_{\varepsilon_0,L}:=\{\mathcal T:I\to X_{\varepsilon_0},~\gamma(\mathcal T(\varepsilon),\mathcal T(\varepsilon^{\prime}))\le L|\varepsilon-\varepsilon^{\prime}|,~\text{ for all }\varepsilon,\varepsilon^{\prime}\in I\}.\end{align*} $$

This can be viewed as a ball of Lipschitz (with respect to the distance $\gamma $ ) curves from I to $X_{\varepsilon _0}$ . We now consider a measurable, countably valued mapping $\mathbf {T}:\Omega \to B_{\varepsilon _0,L}$ . As before, $(\Omega ,\mathcal F,\mathbb P)$ is a probability space endowed with an invertible, measure-preserving, and ergodic map $\sigma $ and we use the notation $T_{\omega ,\varepsilon }:=\mathbf {T}(\omega )(\varepsilon ,\cdot )$ .

We claim that for any $\varepsilon \in I$ , there exists a measurable family $(h_\omega ^\varepsilon )_{\omega \in \Omega } \subset \mathcal {B}_s$ such that $\mathcal {L}_{\omega ,\varepsilon }h_{\omega }^\varepsilon =h_{\sigma \omega }^\varepsilon $ for $\mathbb P$ -almost every $\omega \in \Omega $ and

$$ \begin{align*}\operatorname{\mathrm{esssup}}_{\omega\in\Omega}\|h_\omega^\varepsilon-h_\omega\|_{w}\le C\varepsilon^\beta|\log(|\varepsilon|)|,\end{align*} $$

for some $C>0$ , $0<\beta <1$ , independent on $\omega $ and $\varepsilon $ , with $h_\omega :=h_\omega ^0$ .

Let us review the assumptions for Theorem 8 in this context.

  • Equation (6) holds by [Reference Demers and Zhang19, Eq. (70)], where $\psi \in \mathcal {B}_s^{\prime }$ is given by $\psi (h)=h(1)$ , $h\in \mathcal {B}_s$ .

  • Up to shrinking $\varepsilon _0$ , we have (8) and (10) by [Reference Demers and Zhang19, Eq. (71)].

  • Up to replacing $\varepsilon $ by $\varepsilon ^\beta $ , (9) follows from the definition of $B_{\varepsilon _0,L}$ and [Reference Demers and Liverani16, Lemma 6.1].

  • As usual, (11) holds as $\mathcal {L}_{\omega ,\varepsilon }$ is a transfer operator associated with $T_{\omega ,\varepsilon }$ .

In particular, Proposition 6 (uniform in $\varepsilon $ and $\omega $ exponential decay of correlations) holds in the present setting. We cannot use here the fixed-point construction of Proposition 7, because we do not know whether the cocycle of transfer operators $(\mathcal L_{\omega , \varepsilon })_{\omega \in \Omega }$ is strongly measurable. However, we can use (8), (10), and that, for each $\varepsilon \in I$ , $T_{\omega ,\varepsilon }$ is countably valued to apply the version of the MET for the so-called $\mathbb P$ -continuous cocycles (see [Reference Froyland, Lloyd and Quas22, Theorem 17]): this gives us, as in Remark 13, that for each $\varepsilon \in I$ there exists:

  • $1\le l=l(\varepsilon )\le \infty $ and a sequence of exceptional Lyapunov exponents

    $$ \begin{align*}0=\Lambda (\varepsilon)=\lambda_1(\varepsilon)>\lambda_2(\varepsilon)>\cdots>\lambda_l(\varepsilon)>\kappa (\varepsilon)\end{align*} $$
    or in the case $l=\infty $ ,
    $$ \begin{align*}0=\Lambda (\varepsilon)=\lambda_1(\varepsilon)>\lambda_2(\varepsilon)>\cdots \quad \text{with }\lim_{n\to\infty} \lambda_n(\varepsilon)=\kappa (\varepsilon); \end{align*} $$
  • a full-measure set $\Omega _\varepsilon $ such that for each $\omega \in \Omega _\varepsilon $ , there is a unique measurable Oseledets splitting

    $$ \begin{align*}\mathcal{B}_s=\bigg(\bigoplus_{j=1}^l Y_j^\varepsilon(\omega)\bigg)\oplus V^\varepsilon(\omega),\end{align*} $$
    where each component of the splitting is equivariant under $\mathcal {L}_{\omega , \varepsilon }$ , that is, $\mathcal L_{\omega , \varepsilon }(Y_j^\varepsilon (\omega ))= Y_j^\varepsilon (\sigma \omega )$ and $\mathcal L_{\omega , \varepsilon }(V^\varepsilon (\omega ))\subset V^\varepsilon (\sigma \omega )$ . The subspaces $Y_j^\varepsilon (\omega )$ are finite-dimensional and for each $y\in Y_j^\varepsilon (\omega )\setminus \{0\}$ ,
    $$ \begin{align*}\lim_{n\to\infty}\frac 1n\log\|\mathcal L_{\omega, \varepsilon}^n y\|_s=\lambda_j(\varepsilon).\end{align*} $$
    Moreover, for $y\in V(\omega )$ , $\lim _{n\to \infty }(1/n)\log \|\mathcal L_{\omega , \varepsilon }^n y\|_s\le \kappa (\varepsilon )$ .

It follows easily from Proposition 6 (see the proof of [Reference Demers and Zhang19, Proposition 3.6]) that $Y_1^\varepsilon (\omega )$ is one-dimensional: for each $\varepsilon \in I$ , we may, thus, consider a generator $h_{\omega }^\varepsilon $ , normalized by $\psi (h_\omega ^\varepsilon )=1$ , which satisfies $\mathcal {L}_{\omega ,\varepsilon }h_\omega ^\varepsilon =h_{\sigma \omega }^\varepsilon $ . We now claim that

(66) $$ \begin{align} \sup_{\varepsilon\in I}\operatorname{\mathrm{esssup}}_{\omega\in\Omega}\|h_\omega^\varepsilon\|_s<+\infty. \end{align} $$

In order to establish (66), we start by observing that using (12) we have that

(67) $$ \begin{align} \| h_\omega^\varepsilon-\mathcal{L}_{\sigma^{-n}\omega,\varepsilon}^n 1\|_s=\|\mathcal{L}_{\sigma^{-n}\omega,\varepsilon}^n(h_{\sigma^{-n} \omega}^\varepsilon-1)\|_s \le D^{\prime}e^{-\lambda^{\prime} n} \|h_{\sigma^{-n} \omega}^\varepsilon-1\|_s, \end{align} $$

for $n\in \mathbb {N}$ , $\omega \in \Omega $ and $\varepsilon \in I$ . Furthermore, because $\lambda _1(\varepsilon )=0$ , we have that the random variable $\omega \mapsto \|h_\omega ^\varepsilon \|_s$ is tempered (we recall that a random variable $K\colon \Omega \to (0, +\infty )$ is tempered if $\lim _{n\to \pm \infty }(1/n) \log K(\sigma ^n \omega )=0$ for $\mathbb P$ -almost every $\omega \in \Omega $ ) for each $\varepsilon \in I$ . Hence, by [Reference Arnold1, Proposition 4.3.3] for each $\varepsilon \in I$ , there exists a random variable $K_\varepsilon \colon \Omega \to (0, +\infty )$ such that

(68) $$ \begin{align} \|h^\varepsilon_\omega -1\|_s \le K_\varepsilon (\omega) \quad \text{and} \quad K_\varepsilon (\sigma^n \omega) \le e^{{\lambda^{\prime} |n|}/{2} }K_\varepsilon (\omega), \end{align} $$

for $\mathbb P$ -almost every $\omega \in \Omega $ and $n\in \mathbb Z$ . By (67) and (68), we obtain that

$$ \begin{align*} \| h_\omega^\varepsilon-\mathcal{L}_{\sigma^{-n}\omega,\varepsilon}^n 1\|_s \le D^{\prime}K_\varepsilon (\omega)e^{-({\lambda^{\prime} n}/{2})} \quad \text{for }\mathbb P\text{-almost every }\omega \in \Omega\text{ and }n\in \mathbb{N}, \end{align*} $$

which implies that for $\varepsilon \in I$ ,

(69) $$ \begin{align} h_\omega^\varepsilon=\lim_{n\to \infty} \mathcal{L}_{\sigma^{-n}\omega,\varepsilon}^n 1 \quad \text{in }\mathcal{B}_s, \text{for }\mathbb P\text{-almost every }\omega \in \Omega. \end{align} $$

Clearly, (66) follows readily from (8) and (69). From there, we can reproduce the proof of Theorem 8, to obtain the announced result.

Remark 23. It is natural to ask whether Theorem 12 can be applied in the piecewise hyperbolic setting described above. First, we note that there is no natural candidate for a $\mathcal {B}_{ss}$ space. Indeed, as noted in the introduction of [Reference Demers and Liverani16] (and in contrast with the situation in [Reference Gonzalez-Tokman and Quas26]), considering a (piecewise) $C^r$ or a (piecewise) $C^s$ , $r>s>2$ , system yields the same couple ( $\mathcal {B}_w$ and $\mathcal {B}_s$ ) of Banach spaces. In other words, the degree of the smoothness of maps does not influence the construction of the anisotropic spaces, which makes unclear whether this line of reasoning can produce a space $\mathcal {B}_{ss}$ satisfying our requirements. In fact, to the best of the authors’ knowledge there are currently no results dealing with the linear response for classes of piecewise hyperbolic dynamics described above even in the deterministic setting (that is, when we take $\Omega $ to be a singleton).

Second, the case of deterministic, one-dimensional piecewise expanding maps [Reference Baladi5, Reference Baladi and Smania9] suggests that, in general, the linear response does not hold in a piecewise smooth setting.

Finally, we note that for random compositions of billiard maps such as described, e.g., in [Reference Dragičević, Froyland, Gonzalez-Tokman and Vaienti17] do not fall under the setup of Theorem 8, as they do not satisfy Lasota–Yorke inequalities of the type (8) and (10) (the $\|\cdot \|_w$ carries a factor $\eta ^n$ for some $\eta \ge 1$ ).

Acknowledgments

We would like to thank the anonymous referee for their constructive comments. D.D. was supported in part by Croatian Science Foundation under the project IP-2019-04-1239 and by the University of Rijeka under the projects uniri-prirod-18-9 and uniri-pr-prirod-19-16. J.S. was supported by the European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme (grant agreement number 787304).

References

REFERENCES

Arnold, L.. Random Dynamical Systems (Springer Monographs inMathematics). Springer, Berlin, 1998.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bahsoun, W., Ruziboev, M. and Saussol, B.. Linearresponse for random dynamical systems. Adv. Math. 364 (2020),107011.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bahsoun, W. and Saussol, B.. Linear response in the intermittent family: differentiation in a weightedC 0-norm. Discrete Contin. Dyn. Syst. 36 (2016),66576668.Google Scholar
Baladi, V.. Correlation spectrum of quenched and annealed equilibrium statesfor random expanding maps. Comm. Math. Phys. 186 (1997),671700.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Baladi, V.. On the susceptibility function of piecewise expanding intervalmaps. Comm. Math. Phys. 275 (2007),839859.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Baladi, V.. Linear response, or else. ICM SeoulProceedings, Volume III. Kyung Moon Sa, Seoul, 2014, pp. 525545.Google Scholar
Baladi, V.. Dynamical Zeta Functions and Dynamical Determinants for Hyperbolic Maps.A Functional Approach (Ergebnisse der Mathematik und ihrer Grenzgebiete. 3. Folge. A Series of Modern Surveys in Mathematics [Resultsin Mathematics and Related Areas. 3rd Series. A Series of Modern Surveys in Mathematics], 68). Springer,Cham, 2018.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Baladi, V., Kondah, A. and Schmitt, B..Random correlations for small perturbations of expanding maps. Random Comput. Dyn. 4 (1996), 179204.Google Scholar
Baladi, V. and Smania, D.. Linear response formula for piecewise expanding unimodal maps.Nonlinearity 21 (2008), 677711; Corrigendum:Nonlinearity 25 (2012), 2203–2205.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Baladi, V. and Smania, D.. Linear response for smooth deformations of generic nonuniformly hyperbolic unimodalmaps. Ann. Sci. Éc. Norm. Supér. (4) 45 (2012),861926.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Baladi, V. and Todd, M.. Linear response for intermittent maps. Comm. Math. Phys. 347 (2016), 857874.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bogenschütz, T.. Stochastic stability of invariantsubspaces. Ergod. Th. & Dynam. Sys. 20 (2000),663680.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Conze, J. P. and Raugi, A.. Limit theorems for sequential expanding dynamical systems on $\left[0,1\right]$ . Ergodic Theory and Related Fields (Contemporary Mathematics, 430). American Mathematical Society, Providence, RI, 2007, pp. 89121.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Crimmins, H.. Stability of hyperbolic Oseledets splittings for quasi-compact operatorcocycles. Preprint, 2019, arXiv:1912.03008.Google Scholar
Crimmins, H. and Nakano, Y.. A spectral approach to quenched linear and higher-order response for partially hyperbolic dynamics.Preprint, 2021, arXiv:2105.11188.Google Scholar
Demers, M. and Liverani, C.. Stability of statistical properties in two-dimensional piecewise hyperbolicmaps. Trans. Amer. Math. Soc. 360 (2008),47774814.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Demers, M. and Zhang, H. K.. A functional analytic approach to perturbations of the Lorentz gas. Comm.Math. Phys. 324, 767830 (2013).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dolgopyat, D.. On differentiability of SRB states for partially hyperbolicsystems. Invent. Math. 155 (2004),389449.Google Scholar
Dragičević, D., Froyland, G., Gonzalez-Tokman, C. andVaienti, S.. A spectral approach for quenched limit theorems forrandom hyperbolic dynamical systems. Trans. Amer. Math. Soc. 373 (2020),629664.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dragičević, D. and Hafouta, Y.. Limit theorems for random expanding or Anosov dynamical systems and vector-valuedobservables. Ann. Henri Poincaré 21 (2020),38693917.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Froyland, G., Gonzalez-Tokman, C. and Quas, A..Stability and approximation of random invariant densities for Lasota–Yorke map cocycles.Nonlinearity 27 (2014), 647660.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Froyland, G., Lloyd, S. and Quas, A.. Asemi-invertible Oseledets theorem with applications to transfer operator cocycles. Discrete Contin. Dyn. Syst. 33 ( 9 ) (2013), 38353860.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Galatolo, S. and Giulietti, P.. A linear response for dynamical systems with additive noise. Nonlinearity 32 (2019), 22692301.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Galatolo, S. and Sedro, J.. Quadratic response of random and deterministic dynamical systems.Chaos 30 (2020), 023113, 15 p.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Gonzalez-Tokman, C. and Quas, A.. A semi-invertible operator Oseledets theorem. Ergod. Th. & Dynam.Sys. 34 (2014), 12301272.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gouëzel, S. and Liverani, C.. Banach spaces adapted to Anosov systems . Ergod. Th.& Dynam. Sys. 26 (2006), 123151.Google Scholar
Korepanov, A.. Linear response for intermittent maps with summable andnonsummable decay of correlations. Nonlinearity 29 (2016),17351754.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ruelle, D.. Differentiation of SRB states. Comm. Math.Phys. 187 (1997), 227241.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sedro, J.. A regularity result for fixed points, with applications to linearresponse. Nonlinearity 31 (2018),14171440.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sedro, J. and Rugh, H. H.. Regularity of characteristic exponents and linear response for transfer operatorcocycles. Comm. Math. Phys. 383 (2021),12431289.CrossRefGoogle Scholar