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Spectrum of weak model sets with Borel windows

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 June 2022

Gerhard Keller
Affiliation:
Department für Mathematik, Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg, Cauerstraße 11, 91058 Erlangen, Germany e-mail: [email protected]
Christoph Richard*
Affiliation:
Department für Mathematik, Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg, Cauerstraße 11, 91058 Erlangen, Germany e-mail: [email protected]
Nicolae Strungaru
Affiliation:
Department of Mathematical Sciences, MacEwan University, 10700-104 Avenue, Edmonton, AB, Canada Institute of Mathematics “Simon Stoilow”, Bucharest, Romania e-mail: [email protected]
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Abstract

Consider the extended hull of a weak model set together with its natural shift action. Equip the extended hull with the Mirsky measure, which is a certain natural pattern frequency measure. It is known that the extended hull is a measure-theoretic factor of some group rotation, which is called the underlying torus. Among other results, in the article Periods and factors of weak model sets, we showed that the extended hull is isomorphic to a factor group of the torus, where certain periods of the window of the weak model set have been factored out. This was proved for weak model sets having a compact window. In this note, we argue that the same results hold for arbitrary measurable and relatively compact windows. Our arguments crucially rely on Moody’s work on uniform distribution in model sets. We also discuss implications for the diffraction of such weak model sets and discuss a new class of examples which are generic for the Mirsky measure.

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© The Author(s), 2022. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of The Canadian Mathematical Society

1 The result

Throughout this article, we will adopt the setting of [Reference Keller and Richard12, Reference Keller and Richard13]. For the statement of our result to be self-contained, we briefly recall the main notation. Fix locally compact second countable abelian groups $G,H$ with Haar measures $m_G,m_H$ , and consider a co-compact lattice ${\mathscr L}$ in $G\times H$ , that projects injectively to G and densely to H. A window is a measurable relatively compact set $W\subseteq H$ . By the so-called cut-and-project construction, these ingredients produce a weak model set. Let us describe this using point measures instead of sets. Consider the compact quotient group ${\widetilde {X}}=(G\times H)/{\mathscr L}$ , which is sometimes called the torus. (The torus is denoted by $\hat X$ in [Reference Keller and Richard13]. We changed notation from hat into tilde in order not to get into conflict with the group dual and the Fourier transform.) Fix ${\tilde {x}}=x+{\mathscr L}\in {\widetilde {X}}$ . The cut step yields the configuration $\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle W}({\tilde {x}})=\sum _{y\in (x+{\mathscr L})\cap (G\times W)}\delta _y$ , where $\delta _y$ puts a unit mass at $y\in G\times H$ . The projection step maps the configuration $\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle W}({\tilde {x}})$ to G, using the canonical projection $\pi ^{\scriptscriptstyle G}:G\times H\to G$ . This gives rise to a point measure $\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}({\tilde {x}})=(\pi ^{\scriptscriptstyle G}_*\circ \nu _{\scriptscriptstyle W})({\tilde {x}})$ , which has uniformly discrete support. The set $\Lambda _W({\tilde {x}})=\operatorname {supp}(\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}({\tilde {x}}))$ is called a weak model set, and we sometimes abbreviate $\Lambda _W=\operatorname {supp}(\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}(\tilde 0))$ . The vague closure of $\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}({\widetilde {X}})$ in the space of regular Borel measures on G is called the extended hull ${\mathcal M}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}_{\scriptscriptstyle W}$ . The natural translation action T on G, given by group addition $T_{g}g'=g+g'$ , induces a translation action $\widetilde {T}$ on ${\widetilde {X}}$ by $\widetilde {T}_g {\tilde {x}}=(g,0)+{\tilde {x}}$ and an action S on ${\mathcal M}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}_{\scriptscriptstyle W}$ by $(S_g\nu )(A)=\nu (T_g^{-1}A)$ . Let us denote by $m_{\widetilde {X}}$ the normalized Haar measure on ${\widetilde {X}}$ . Since $\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}$ is a measurable mapping, $({\mathcal M}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}_{\scriptscriptstyle W},S)$ carries a natural ergodic probability measure $Q_{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}=m_{\widetilde {X}}\circ (\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G})^{-1}$ , the so-called Mirsky measure.

We have the following new results for the Mirsky measure on the extended hull. These generalize Theorems B1 and B2 in [Reference Keller and Richard13], which were formulated for measurable, relatively compact windows $W\subseteq H$ that are compact modulo $0$ [Reference Keller and Richard13, Definition 3.5], i.e., there exist a compact set K and set N of zero Haar measure such that $W=K\triangle N$ . For the first result, recall that W is Haar aperiodic if $m_H((h+W)\triangle W)=0$ implies $h=0$ . In Euclidean space, any nonempty window of positive measure is Haar aperiodic.

Theorem B1’ Suppose that W is measurable, relatively compact, and Haar aperiodic. Then $({\mathcal M}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}_{\scriptscriptstyle W},Q_{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G},S)$ is measure-theoretically isomorphic to $({\widetilde {X}},m_{\widetilde {X}}, \widetilde {T})$ .

For the general case, consider the group $H_W^{Haar}=\{h\in H: m_H((h+W)\triangle W)=0\} $ of Haar periods of W. Write ${\mathcal H}_W^{Haar}=\{0\}\times H_W^{Haar}$ for the canonical embedding of $H_W^{Haar}$ into $G\times H$ .

Theorem B2’ Suppose that W is measurable, relatively compact, and ${m_H(W)>0}$ . Let ${\widetilde {X}'}={\widetilde {X}}/\pi ^{\scriptscriptstyle {\widetilde {X}}}({\mathcal H}_W^{Haar})$ with induced G-action $\widetilde {T}'$ and Haar measure $m_{{\widetilde {X}'}}$ . Then $({\mathcal M}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}_{\scriptscriptstyle W},Q_{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}, S)$ is measure-theoretically isomorphic to $({\widetilde {X}'}, m_{\widetilde {X}'},\widetilde {T}')$ .

Remark 1.1 (Diffraction analysis)

The above result implies the known fact that the extended hull has pure point dynamical spectrum when equipped with the Mirsky measure (compare, e.g., [Reference Keller and Richard12, Theorem 2(a)]). In addition, the isomorphism in Theorem B2’ explicitly describes the eigenvalues of the dynamical spectrum. This is particularly useful for diffraction analysis as discussed in Section 4 (compare also the introduction to [Reference Keller and Richard12]). Let us mention here that ${\widetilde {X}'}$ characterizes the group generated by the Bragg peak positions in the diffraction spectrum, i.e., that group is given by the $\widehat G$ -projection of the group dual to ${\widetilde {X}'}$ , which is viewed as a subgroup of $G\times H$ . For details, see Remarks 4.3 and 4.4.

Remark 1.2 (Examples)

The above diffraction properties are realized by configurations which are generic for the Mirsky measure. The precise connection is somewhat subtle, as Mirsky genericity on G and on $G\times H$ have to be distinguished (see Theorem 4.6 and Remark 4.7). For windows having almost no outer boundary, it is known that maximal density implies Mirsky genericity (see Remark 2.4). Likewise, for windows having almost no inner boundary, minimal density implies Mirsky genericity. Examples beyond these cases will be discussed in Section 5.

2 Proof ingredients

2.1 Moody’s uniform distribution theorem

We will use a refinement of Moody’s theorem on uniform distribution [Reference Moody18, Theorem 1], which characterizes sets of almost everywhere convergence. We first introduce the relevant notation. Consider any van Hove sequence ${\mathcal A}=(A_n)_n$ in G for averaging (see [Reference Moody18, Equation (4)] for a definition). Recall that $\nu ^{\scriptscriptstyle G}\in {\mathcal M}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}_{\scriptscriptstyle W}$ is Mirsky generic along ${\mathcal A}$ if, for every test function $\phi \in C({\mathcal M}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}_{\scriptscriptstyle W})$ , the ergodic limit holds for the Mirsky measure $Q_{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}$ along ${\mathcal A}$ , i.e., we have

$$ \begin{align*} \lim_{n\to\infty} \frac{1}{m_G(A_n)} \int_{A_n} \phi(S_g \nu^{\scriptscriptstyle G}) \, \mathrm{d}m_G(g)= Q_{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}(\phi) {.} \end{align*} $$

In the sequel, we will consider ergodic limits on subclasses of test functions.

Definition 2.1 (Mirsky k-genericity)

Let ${\mathcal A}=(A_n)_n$ be any van Hove sequence in G, and let $k\in \mathbb N$ . We call $\nu ^{\scriptscriptstyle G}\in {\mathcal M}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}_{\scriptscriptstyle W}$ Mirsky k-generic along ${\mathcal A}$ , if the ergodic limit holds for the Mirsky measure $Q_{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}$ along ${\mathcal A}$ , for every test function $\phi \in C({\mathcal M}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}_{\scriptscriptstyle W})$ of the form $\phi =\phi _{c_1}\cdot \cdots \cdot \phi _{c_k}\in C({\mathcal M}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}_{\scriptscriptstyle W})$ , with $\phi _{c_i}\in C({\mathcal M}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}_{\scriptscriptstyle W})$ given by $\phi _{c_i}(\nu )=\nu (c_i)$ for $c_i\in C_c(G)$ .

Likewise, we will consider Mirsky genericity and Mirsky k-genericity of $\nu \in {\mathcal M}_{\scriptscriptstyle W}$ , i.e., with respect to the Mirsky measure $Q_{\scriptscriptstyle W}=m_{\widetilde {X}}\circ (\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle W})^{-1}$ along ${\mathcal A}$ , where ${\mathcal M}_{\scriptscriptstyle W}$ denotes the vague closure of $\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle W}({\widetilde {X}})$ in the space ${\mathcal M}$ of regular Borel measures on $G\times H$ .

Remark 2.2 (Sets of Mirsky genericity)

Fix any tempered van Hove sequence ${\mathcal A}$ in G (see [Reference Moody18, Equation (5)] for a definition), and consider the set ${\widetilde {X}}_{gen}={\widetilde {X}}_{gen}({{\mathcal A}})$ of points ${\tilde {x}}\in {\widetilde {X}}$ for which $\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle W}({\tilde {x}})$ is Mirsky generic along ${\mathcal A}$ . Note that ${\widetilde {X}}_{gen}$ has full $m_{\widetilde {X}}$ -measure in ${\widetilde {X}}$ , which is seen as in the case of $\mathbb Z$ -actions (see, e.g., [Reference Einsiedler and Ward7, Corollary 4.20]). Here, we use that $G\times H$ is second countable and that ${\mathcal M}_{\scriptscriptstyle W}$ is compact and metrizable. This allows us to apply the Lindenstrauss ergodic theorem [Reference Lindenstrauss17, Theorem 1.2], which holds for van Hove sequences that are tempered. For the existence of such averaging sequences, see, e.g., the discussion in [Reference Müller and Richard19, Remark 2.12(v)]. In particular, corresponding sets ${\widetilde {X}}_k\supseteq {\widetilde {X}}_{k+1}\supseteq {\widetilde {X}}_{gen}$ for Mirsky k-genericity also have full $m_{\widetilde {X}}$ -measure, and we have ${\widetilde {X}}_{gen}=\bigcap _{k\in \mathbb N} {\widetilde {X}}_{k}$ by the Stone–Weierstrass theorem. Observe that Mirsky k-genericity of $\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}({\tilde {x}})$ is inherited from Mirsky k-genericity of $\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle W}({\tilde {x}})$ , by continuity of the projection map $\pi ^{\scriptscriptstyle G}_*$ . Thus, all sets of k-genericity for the Mirsky measure $Q_{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}$ are full $m_{{\widetilde {X}}}$ -measure sets. Moreover, all of the above sets are $\widetilde {T}$ -invariant, as a consequence of the van Hove property.

For the following proposition, note that, for $\eta \in C_c(H)$ , we have

$$ \begin{align*} (\eta\circ \pi^{\scriptscriptstyle H})\cdot \nu_{\scriptscriptstyle W}({\tilde{x}})=\sum_{y\in (x+{\mathscr L})\cap (G\times W)} \eta(y_H) \cdot\delta_y {,} \end{align*} $$

where we use the notation $y=(y_G,y_H)$ for $y\in G\times H$ .

Proposition 2.3 (Moody’s uniform distribution theorem)

Assume that $W\subseteq H$ is relatively compact and measurable. Let ${\mathcal A}=(A_n)_n$ be any van Hove sequence in G. Then the following hold.

  1. (a) The configuration $\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}({\tilde {x}})$ is Mirsky 1-generic along $-{\mathcal A}$ if and only if

    (2.1) $$ \begin{align} \qquad\quad\lim_{n\to\infty} \frac{\nu_{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}({\tilde{x}})(A_n)}{m_G(A_n)}=\lim_{n\to\infty} \frac{\nu_{\scriptscriptstyle W}({\tilde{x}})(A_n\times H)}{m_G(A_n)}=\mathrm{dens}({\mathscr L})\cdot m_H(W) {.} \end{align} $$
  2. (b) The configuration $\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle W}({\tilde {x}})$ is Mirsky 1-generic along $-{\mathcal A}$ if and only if

    (2.2) $$ \begin{align} \lim_{n\to\infty} \frac{((\eta\circ \pi^{\scriptscriptstyle H})\cdot \nu_{\scriptscriptstyle W}({\tilde{x}}))(A_n\times H)}{m_G(A_n)}=\mathrm{dens}({\mathscr L})\cdot m_H(\eta \cdot 1_W) \end{align} $$
    for any $\eta \in C_c(H)$ .

Remark 2.4 (When Mirsky 1-genericity implies Mirsky genericity)

Consider any relatively compact and measurable window $W\subseteq H$ . As limiting point frequencies of $\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}({\tilde {x}})$ always lie between $\mathrm {dens}({\mathscr L})\cdot m_H(W^{\circ })$ and $\mathrm {dens}({\mathscr L})\cdot m_H(\overline {W})$ (see, e.g., [Reference Huck and Richard9, Proposition 3.4]), we say that $\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}({\tilde {x}})$ has maximal density along ${\mathcal A}$ if the limit on the left-hand side in equation (2.1) equals $\mathrm {dens}({\mathscr L})\cdot m_H(\overline {W})$ . As discussed in [Reference Keller and Richard12, Remark 3.16] and [Reference Keller and Richard13, Remark 8.7], maximal density of $\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}({\tilde {x}})$ along ${\mathcal A}$ implies genericity of $\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle W}({\tilde {x}})$ along $-{\mathcal A}$ with respect to the Mirsky measure $Q_{\scriptscriptstyle \overline {W}}$ on $G\times H$ . One concludes that maximal density of $\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}({\tilde {x}})$ implies genericity of $\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle W}({\tilde {x}})$ with respect to the Mirsky measure $Q_{\scriptscriptstyle W}$ on $G\times H$ if and only if the window satisfies $m_H(W)=m_H(\overline {W})$ . This is a considerably stronger condition than the window being compact modulo $0$ . Likewise, we speak of minimal density if the limit on the left-hand side in equation (2.1) equals $\mathrm {dens}({\mathscr L})\cdot m_H(W^{\circ })$ . Minimal density of $\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}({\tilde {x}})$ along ${\mathcal A}$ implies Mirsky genericity of $\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle W}({\tilde {x}})$ along $-{\mathcal A}$ if and only if $m_H(W)=m_H(W^{\circ })$ . See [Reference Baake, Huck and Strungaru2, Theorem 17 and Remark 5] for a variant of these results. An extension will be given in Lemma 5.4 and Remark 5.5.

Remark 2.5 (Mirsky genericity on G versus $G \times H$ )

Let us emphasize here that, for each W and $d \in H$ , we have $Q_{\scriptscriptstyle d+W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}=Q_{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}$ , which follows from the invariance of the Haar measure on $\tilde {X}$ under translation by $(0,d)+{\mathscr L}$ . Indeed, denoting $S_{(0,d)}:G\times H\to G\times H, x\mapsto x+(0,d)$ and $\sigma _d:{\mathcal M}_{\scriptscriptstyle W}\to {\mathcal M}_{\scriptscriptstyle W}, \sigma _d\nu =\nu \circ S_{(0,d)}^{-1}$ , we have

$$ \begin{align*} \begin{aligned} Q_{\scriptscriptstyle d+W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G} &= m_{{\widetilde{X}}}\circ\nu_{\scriptscriptstyle d+W}^{-1}\circ(\pi^{\scriptscriptstyle G}_*)^{-1} = m_{{\widetilde{X}}}\circ(\sigma_d\circ\nu_{\scriptscriptstyle W}\circ S_{(0,d)}^{-1})^{-1}\circ(\pi^{\scriptscriptstyle G}_*)^{-1}\\ &=(m_{{\widetilde{X}}}\circ S_{(0,d)})\circ \nu_{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{-1} \circ(\pi^{\scriptscriptstyle G}_*\circ\sigma_d)^{-1}= m_{{\widetilde{X}}}\circ\nu_{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{-1}\circ(\pi^{\scriptscriptstyle G}_*)^{-1}=Q_{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}. \end{aligned} \end{align*} $$

On the other hand, if $\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle W}({\tilde {x}})$ is Mirsky generic, then (2.2) uniquely identifies the measure $\eta \mapsto m_H(\eta \cdot 1_W)$ for $\eta \in C_c(H)$ , i.e., the Haar measure restricted to W. It follows immediately that $Q_{d+W}=Q_W$ if and only if d is a Haar period for W.

The above result can, with some adaptions, be proved as in [Reference Moody18]. We start with the following lemma which slightly refines [Reference Moody18, Proposition 2].

Lemma 2.6 Let $W\subseteq H$ be relatively compact and nonempty. Then any point in G has a compact neighborhood B such that $((B-B)\times (W-W))\cap {\mathscr L}=\{(0,0)\}$ . As a consequence, for every ${\tilde {x}}\in {\widetilde {X}}$ and every $g,g'\in \Lambda _W({\tilde {x}})$ , $(g+B)\cap (g'+B)\ne \varnothing $ implies $g=g'$ . The latter statement also holds with W replaced by $-W$ . Moreover, the following are equivalent:

  1. (i) $((B-B)\times (W-W))\cap {\mathscr L}=\{(0,0)\}$ .

  2. (ii) $\pi _{{\widetilde {X}}}$ is one-to-one on $B\times W$ .

  3. (iii) $\Lambda _{W-W}\cap (B-B)=\{0\}$ .

Proof For the existence statement, take any compact zero neighborhood $U\subseteq G$ and note that $(U\times (W-W)) \cap {\mathscr L}$ is finite as ${\mathscr L}$ is locally finite. Hence, there is a zero neighborhood $V\subseteq U$ such that $(V\times (W-W))\cap {\mathscr L}=\{(0,0)\}$ . The first claim follows after choosing a compact neighborhood B of the given point in G such that $B-B\subseteq V$ .

For the second claim let $g,g'\in \Lambda _W({\tilde {x}})$ such that $(g+B)\cap (g'+B)\ne \varnothing $ . Then there exist $h,h'\in H$ such that $(g,h), (g',h')\in (G\times W) \cap (x+{\mathscr L})$ . As $(g+B)\cap (g'+B)\ne \varnothing $ , this implies $(g-g',h-h') \in ((B-B)\times (W-W)) \cap {\mathscr L}$ . Hence, $g=g'$ . Note that replacing W by $-W$ does not alter the argument.

$({\mathrm i}) \Rightarrow ({\mathrm ii}):$ Consider $(g,h), (g',h')\in B\times W$ such that $(g,h)=(g',h')+\ell $ for some $\ell \in {\mathscr L}$ . We then have $(g-g',h-h')\in ((B-B)\times (W-W))\cap {\mathscr L}$ . Hence, $(g-g',h-h')=(0,0)$ , and the claim follows.

$({\mathrm ii}) \Rightarrow ({\mathrm iii}):$ Let $g\in \Lambda _{W-W}\cap (B-B)$ . Then there exists $h\in H$ such that $(g,h)\in ((B-B)\times (W-W))\cap {\mathscr L}$ . Then $g=b-b'$ for some $b,b'\in B$ and $h=w-w'$ for some $w,w'\in W$ , and $(b,w)=(b',w')+\ell $ for $\ell =(g,h)\in {\mathscr L}$ . Hence, $(b,w)=(b',w')$ , which implies $g=0$ .

$({\mathrm iii}) \Rightarrow ({\mathrm i}):$ Assume that $(g,h)\in ((B-B)\times (W-W))\cap {\mathscr L}$ . Then $g\in \Lambda _{W-W}\cap (B-B)$ , which implies $g=0$ . As $\pi ^{\scriptscriptstyle G}$ is one-to-one on ${\mathscr L}$ , this implies $h=0$ , and the claim follows.▪

Proof (Proof of Proposition 2.3) We treat assertion (b) first. By a standard denseness argument, it suffices to consider functions $c\in C_c(G\times H)$ of product type $c = (\psi \circ \pi ^{\scriptscriptstyle G}) \cdot (\eta \circ \pi ^{\scriptscriptstyle H})$ where $\psi \in C_c(G)$ and $\eta \in C_c(H)$ . Recalling $\phi _c(\nu )=\nu (c)$ , we have, for ${\tilde {y}}=y+{\mathscr L}=(y_G,y_H)+{\mathscr L}$ , that

$$ \begin{align*} \phi_c(\nu_{\scriptscriptstyle W}({\tilde{y}})) =\sum_{z\in (y+{\mathscr L})\cap (G\times W)} \psi(z_G)\cdot \eta(z_H) =\sum_{\ell\in{\mathscr L}} c(y+\ell)\cdot 1_W(y_H+\ell_H)= \tilde f({\tilde{y}}) {,} \end{align*} $$

where $\tilde f\in \mathcal L^1({\widetilde {X}}, m_{{\widetilde {X}}})$ denotes the projected ${\mathscr L}$ -periodization of the function $y\mapsto f(y)=c(y)\cdot 1_W(y_H)$ . Using the extended Weil formula [Reference Reiter and Stegeman20, Theorem 3.4.6], we thus get

$$ \begin{align*} \begin{aligned} \int_{{\mathcal M}_{\scriptscriptstyle W}} \phi_c \, \mathrm{d} Q_{\scriptscriptstyle W} &= \int_{{\widetilde{X}}}\phi_c(\nu_{\scriptscriptstyle W}({\tilde{y}})) \, \mathrm{d}m_{{\widetilde{X}}}({\tilde{y}}) = \int_{{\widetilde{X}}} \tilde f({\tilde{y}}) \, \mathrm{d}m_{{\widetilde{X}}}({\tilde{y}}) = m_{{\widetilde{X}}}(\tilde f)\\ &=\mathrm{dens}({\mathscr L})\cdot m_{G\times H}(f)= \mathrm{dens}({\mathscr L})\cdot m_G(\psi)\cdot m_H( \eta\cdot 1_W) {.} \end{aligned} \end{align*} $$

Next, consider the G-orbit of any ${\tilde {x}}\in {\widetilde {X}}$ . Here, we assume without loss of generality that $\psi \in C_c(G)$ has sufficiently small support such that $B=\operatorname {supp}(\psi )$ satisfies the assumption in Lemma 2.6. (The general case of arbitrary compact support can be treated using a partition of unity by functions of small support.) Write $Y=B\times W\subseteq G\times H$ and define $\widetilde Y=\pi _{{\widetilde {X}}}(B\times W)\subseteq {\widetilde {X}}$ . It is readily seen that $\widetilde {T}_g{\tilde {x}} \in \widetilde Y$ if and only if $g\in -\Lambda _W({\tilde {x}})+B$ . In particular, in that case, there exists $\ell \in {\mathscr L}$ such that $(x+\ell )_G\in \Lambda _W({\tilde {x}})$ , $g\in -(x+\ell )_G+B$ , and $\tilde f(\widetilde T_g{\tilde {x}})=\psi ((x+\ell )_G)\cdot \eta ((x+\ell )_H)\cdot 1_W((x+\ell )_H)$ as $\pi _{{\widetilde {X}}}$ is one-to-one on Y. Note that $-\Lambda _W({\tilde {x}})+B$ is a pairwise disjoint union of translates of B, which follows from Lemma 2.6 as $-\Lambda _W({\tilde {x}})=\Lambda _{-W}(-{\tilde {x}})$ . As $S_g \nu _{\scriptscriptstyle W}({\tilde {x}})=\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle W}(\widetilde {T}_g{\tilde {x}})$ , we thus have by the van Hove property of $(-A_n)_n$ that

$$ \begin{align*} \begin{aligned} \lim_{n\to\infty} \frac{1}{m_G(A_n)}& \int_{-A_n} \phi_c(S_g \nu_{\scriptscriptstyle W}({\tilde{x}})) \, \mathrm{d}m_G(g) =\lim_{n\to\infty} \frac{1}{m_G(A_n)} \int_{-A_n} \tilde f(\widetilde{T}_g{\tilde{x}}) \, \mathrm{d}m_G(g) \\ &=\lim_{n\to\infty} \frac{1}{m_G(A_n)} \sum_{y_G\in \Lambda_W({\tilde{x}})\cap A_n} \eta(y_H) \cdot m_G(\psi)\\ &=m_G(\psi)\cdot \lim_{n\to\infty} \frac{((\eta\circ \pi^{\scriptscriptstyle H})\cdot \nu_{\scriptscriptstyle W}({\tilde{x}}))(A_n\times H)}{m_G(A_n)} {,} \end{aligned} \end{align*} $$

provided that the above limit exists. Now, the claim in part (b) is obvious.

The proof of (a) is analogous: reread the above proof of (b) for $\eta \equiv 1$ , considering functions $c\in C_c(G)$ and 1-genericity with respect to $Q_{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}$ .▪

2.2 Haar periods and periods

For the following, recall the notion of period group $H_W=\{h\in H: h+W=W\}$ and of Haar period group $H_W^{Haar}=\{h \in H: m_H((h+W)\Delta W)=0\}$ . Then W is called (Haar) aperiodic if its (Haar) period group is trivial. To apply the techniques in [Reference Keller and Richard13] with only minimal changes, we will circumvent the notion of Haar regularity [Reference Keller and Richard13, Remark 3.12], which relies on compactness. Instead, we will construct a measurable version $W_{inv}$ of W, which coincides with W up to measure zero, but is strictly invariant under translation by any $h\in H_W^{Haar}$ .

We start by reviewing some simple properties of $H_W^{Haar}$ , which are listed in [Reference Strungaru23, Lemma 7.1] (see also [Reference Baake, Huck and Strungaru2, Fact 2]). For completeness, we include the straightforward proofs. First, let us recall that for a measurable relatively compact set $W \subseteq H$ , its covariogram function $c_W$ is defined via

(2.3) $$ \begin{align} c_W:=1_W*1_{-W} {,} \end{align} $$

where $*$ denotes convolution. Note that $c_W$ is a positive definite function, which is continuous by [Reference Rudin22, Theorem I.1.6(b)] and [Reference Reiter and Stegeman20, Proposition 3.6.3] and obviously has compact support. A simple computation yields, for any $h\in H$ , the relation

(2.4) $$ \begin{align} \qquad m_H((h+W)\triangle W)=2\cdot m_H(W\backslash (W+h))=2\cdot \left(c_W(0)- c_W(h)\right) {.} \end{align} $$

We have the following characterization of $H_W^{Haar}$ .

Lemma 2.7 [Reference Strungaru23, Lemma 7.1]

Assume that $W\subseteq H$ is relatively compact and measurable. Then

$$ \begin{align*} \begin{aligned} H_W^{Haar} &= \{ h \in H : \|1_W-T_h1_W \|_1 =0 \} = \{h \in H : c_W(h)=c_W(0) \} \\ & = \{ h \in H : T_hc_W= c_W\} {,} \end{aligned} \end{align*} $$

where $(T_hf)(y)=f(y-h)$ denotes translation in H. In particular, $ H_W^{Haar}$ is a compact group.

Proof The first equality follows immediately from the observation $\|1_W-T_h1_W \|_1 = m_H(W \Delta (h+W))$ , whereas the second one follows from equation (2.4). For the last equality, the inclusion $\supseteq $ is obvious, whereas $\subseteq $ is an immediate consequence of Krein’s inequality $|f(y-h)-f(y)|^2\le 2f(0)(f(0)-\mathrm {Re} f(h))$ for positive definite functions f (see, e.g., [Reference Berg and Forst5, Chapter I.3.4]). Finally, since $c_W$ is a continuous function of compact support, its period group is closed and relatively compact, hence compact.▪

We can now prove the existence of the measurable version $W_{inv}$ of W.

Lemma 2.8 There exists a measurable set $W_{inv}\subseteq H$ such that:

  1. (a) $m_H(W\triangle W_{inv})=0$ and

  2. (b) $W_{inv}+h=W_{inv}$ for all $h\in H_W^{Haar}$ .

Proof Abbreviate $H_0:=H_W^{Haar}$ and denote by $m_{H_0}$ the normalized Haar measure on the compact abelian group $H_0$ . Define $\psi :H\to {\mathbb R}$ as the $H_0$ -periodization of $1_W$ , i.e.,

$$ \begin{align*} \psi(h):=\int 1_W(h+h_0)\,\mathrm{d}m_{H_0}(h_0) {,} \end{align*} $$

and let $W_{inv}:=\{h\in H:\psi (h)=1\}$ . As $m_{H_0}$ is translation invariant, we have $\psi (h+h_0)=\psi (h)$ for all $h_0\in H_0$ , and assertion (b) follows at once.

We turn to assertion (a). For measurable $A\subseteq H$ with $m_H(A)<\infty $ and all $h_0\in H_0$ , we have

$$ \begin{align*} m_H(A\cap W)= m_H(A\cap (W-h_0))=\int_A1_W(h+h_0)\,\mathrm{d}m_H(h) {.} \end{align*} $$

Hence, using Fubini,

$$ \begin{align*} \begin{aligned} m_H(A\cap W) &= \int\left(\int_A1_W(h+h_0)\,\mathrm{d}m_H(h)\right)\mathrm{d}m_{H_0}(h_0)\\ &= \int_A\left(\int1_W(h+h_0)\,\mathrm{d}m_{H_0}(h_0)\right)\mathrm{d}m_H(h) = \int_A\psi\,\mathrm{d}m_H {.} \end{aligned} \end{align*} $$

As $m_H$ is $\sigma $ -finite and this holds for all $A\subseteq H$ of finite measure, it follows that $1_W\cdot m_H=\psi \cdot m_H$ , i.e., $1_W=\psi $ on a measurable set $H_1\subseteq H$ with $m_H(H\backslash H_1)=0$ . It follows that $W\cap H_1=W_{inv}\cap H_1$ .▪

The lemma has the following immediate corollary.

Corollary 2.9 (Periods and Haar periods)

We have $H_W^{Haar}=H_{W_{inv}}^{Haar}=H_{W_{inv}}$ . In particular, W is Haar aperiodic if and only if $W_{inv}$ is aperiodic.

Let $H':=H/H_{W_{inv}}$ and denote by $\varphi :H\to H'$ the canonical projection. Consider $W':=\varphi (W_{inv})$ and note $\varphi ^{-1}(W')=W_{inv}$ .

Lemma 2.10 $W'\subseteq H'$ is Borel measurable and Haar aperiodic in $H'$ .

Proof We first show measurability of $W'$ . Let $W":=\varphi (H\backslash W_{inv})$ . Then $W'\cup W"=\varphi (H)=H'$ , where $W'\cap W"=\varnothing $ . Indeed, otherwise, there are $h_1\in W_{inv}$ and $h_2\in H\backslash W_{inv}$ such that $\varphi (h_1)=\varphi (h_2)$ . Then $h_2-h_1\in H_{W_{inv}}$ , so that $W_{inv}+(h_2-h_1)=W_{inv}$ . In particular, $h_2=h_1+(h_2-h_1)\in W_{inv}$ , a contradiction. As $W'$ and $W"=H'\backslash W'$ are both analytic sets [Reference Kechris11, Proposition 14.4(ii)], they are Borel sets in view of Souslin’s theorem [Reference Kechris11, Theorem 14.11]. To show Haar aperiodicity, suppose that $m_{H'}((W'+h')\triangle W')=0$ for some $h'=\varphi (h)\in H'$ , where $m_{H'}=m_H\circ \varphi ^{-1}$ . Then $0=m_H((W_{inv}+h+H_{W_{inv}})\triangle W_{inv})=m_H((W_{inv}+h)\triangle W_{inv})$ , so that $h\in H_{W_{inv}}^{Haar}=H_{W_{inv}}$ (see Corollary 2.9). Hence, $h'=\varphi (h)$ is the neutral element in $H'$ .▪

3 Proofs

3.1 Haar aperiodic windows

Our proof of Theorem B1’ uses Mirsky 1-generic configurations on $G\times H$ along some fixed tempered van Hove sequence. Recall that the set ${\widetilde {X}}_{1}\subseteq {\widetilde {X}}$ from Remark 2.2 has full $m_{\widetilde {X}}$ -measure and is $\widetilde {T}$ -invariant.

Lemma 3.1 Take ${\tilde {x}},{\tilde {y}}\in {\widetilde {X}}_{1}$ such that $\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}({\tilde {x}})=\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}({\tilde {y}})$ . Then $\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle W}({\tilde {y}})=\sigma _d\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle W}({\tilde {x}})$ for some $d\in H$ , where $(\sigma _d\nu )(A)=\nu (A-(0,d))$ for all Borel subsets A of $G\times H$ . Moreover, d is a Haar period of W.

Proof Proposition 2.3(b) shows that, for each ${\tilde {x}}\in {\widetilde {X}}_{1}$ , the sequence of measures $(\mu _n({\tilde {x}}))_n$ , defined by

(3.1) $$ \begin{align} \mu_n({\tilde{x}})(\eta):= \frac{1}{\mathrm{dens}({\mathscr L})} \frac{((\eta\circ \pi^{\scriptscriptstyle H})\cdot \nu_{\scriptscriptstyle W}({\tilde{x}}))(A_n\times H)}{m_G(A_n)} \end{align} $$

for $\eta \in C_c(H)$ , converges weakly to $m_H|_W$ . Take ${\tilde {x}},{\tilde {y}}\in {\widetilde {X}}_{1}$ such that $\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}({\tilde {x}})=\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}({\tilde {y}})$ . Then, by [Reference Keller and Richard13, Lemma 4.4], there is $d\in H$ such that $\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle W}({\tilde {y}})=\sigma _d\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle W}({\tilde {x}})$ . As both sequences $(\mu _n({\tilde {x}}))_n$ and $(\mu _n({\tilde {y}}))_n$ converge weakly to $m_H|_W$ and as the translation $\sigma _d$ is weakly continuous, this shows that $\sigma _d(m_H|_W)=m_H|_W$ , in particular $m_H((W-d)\cap W)=m_H(W)$ . As $m_H(W)=m_H(W-d)$ , this proves $m_H((W-d)\triangle W)=0$ , i.e., d is a Haar period of W.▪

Lemma 3.2 Define ${\mathcal M}_{\scriptscriptstyle W}'\subseteq {\mathcal M}_{\scriptscriptstyle W}$ by ${\mathcal M}_{\scriptscriptstyle W}'=\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle W}({\widetilde {X}}_{1})$ . If W is Haar aperiodic, then $\pi ^{\scriptscriptstyle G}_*|_{{\mathcal M}_{\scriptscriptstyle W}'}: {\mathcal M}_{\scriptscriptstyle W}'\to {\mathcal M}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}_{\scriptscriptstyle W}$ is one-to-one.

Proof Take ${\tilde {x}},{\tilde {y}}\in {\widetilde {X}}_{1}$ such that $\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}({\tilde {x}})=\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}({\tilde {y}})$ . Then, by Lemma 3.1, we have $\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle W}({\tilde {y}})=\sigma _d\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle W}({\tilde {x}})$ for some Haar period d of W. As W is Haar aperiodic, we get $d=0$ , that is, $\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle W}({\tilde {x}})=\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle W}({\tilde {y}})$ .▪

Proof (Proof of Theorem B1’) $\pi ^{\scriptscriptstyle G}_*$ is one-to-one at $Q_{\scriptscriptstyle W}$ -a.a. $\nu \in {\mathcal M}_{\scriptscriptstyle W}$ by Lemma 3.2 and the fact that ${\widetilde {X}}_{1}$ has full $m_{\widetilde {X}}$ -measure by Remark 2.2. As ${\widetilde {X}}_{1}$ is $\widetilde {T}$ -invariant, we conclude that $\pi ^{\scriptscriptstyle G}_*:({\mathcal M}_{\scriptscriptstyle W},Q_{\scriptscriptstyle W},S)\to ({\mathcal M}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}_{\scriptscriptstyle W},Q_{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G},S)$ is a measure-theoretic isomorphism (observe the Lusin–Souslin theorem [Reference Kechris11, Theorem 15.1]). Moreover, note that $\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}:({\widetilde {X}},m_{\widetilde {X}}, \widetilde {T})\to ({\mathcal M}_{\scriptscriptstyle W},Q_{\scriptscriptstyle W},S)$ is a measure-theoretic isomorphism by [Reference Keller and Richard12, Theorem 2(a)]. Here, we use $m_H(W)>0$ , which follows from Haar aperiodicity of W. Hence, the claim is shown.▪

3.2 General windows

Our proof of Theorem B2’ proceeds by reduction to the Haar aperiodic case. The construction of factoring out topological or measure-theoretic periods has been described in detail in Sections 6 and 7 of [Reference Keller and Richard13] for compact windows. The same constructions can be used in the noncompact case. Since the group of Haar periods is closed, the quotient ${\widetilde {X}'}={\widetilde {X}}/\pi ^{\scriptscriptstyle {\widetilde {X}}}({\mathcal H}_W^{Haar})$ is a compact abelian group.

Proof (Proof of Theorem B2’) Assume first that $W=W_{inv}$ . The set $W'=\varphi (W)$ is Haar aperiodic (see Lemma 2.10). Moreover, note that $({\mathcal M}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}_{\scriptscriptstyle W},Q_{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G},S)=({\mathcal M}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}_{\scriptscriptstyle W'},Q_{\scriptscriptstyle W'}^{\scriptscriptstyle G},S)$ , which follows with the same proof as in Proposition 6.10 in [Reference Keller and Richard13]. Now, the claim of the theorem follows from Theorem B1’. In the general case, note that $({\mathcal M}_{\scriptscriptstyle W},Q_{\scriptscriptstyle W},S)$ is measure-theoretically isomorphic to $({\mathcal M},Q_{\scriptscriptstyle W},S)$ . As the present theorem applies to the regularized window $W_{inv}$ , it suffices to show that $Q_{\scriptscriptstyle W}=m_{\widetilde {X}}\circ (\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle W})^{-1}$ equals $Q_{\scriptscriptstyle W_{inv}}=m_{\widetilde {X}}\circ (\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle W_{inv}})^{-1}$ on ${\mathcal M}$ . However, this follows from the observation

$$ \begin{align*} \left\{{\tilde{x}}\in{\widetilde{X}}:\nu_{\scriptscriptstyle W}({\tilde{x}})\neq\nu_{\scriptscriptstyle W_{inv}}({\tilde{x}})\right\} \subseteq \pi^{\scriptscriptstyle {\widetilde{X}}}\left(\bigcup_{\ell\in{\mathscr L}}\left((G\times(W\backslash W_{inv}))-\ell\right)\right) {,} \end{align*} $$

and this is a set of $m_{\widetilde {X}}$ -measure zero, because ${\mathscr L}$ is countable and $m_H(W\backslash W_{inv})=0$ by Lemma 2.8(a).▪

4 Consequences for diffraction

We discuss implications of our results for diffraction analysis of configurations (compare [Reference Baake and Lenz3, Reference Lenz15]). In particular, we discuss Besicovitch almost periodicity [Reference Lenz, Spindeler and Strungaru16], which links our approach to that in [Reference Strungaru23]. Whereas in the latter reference the Mirsky measure is constructed using Besicovitch almost periodic configurations (compare [Reference Lenz, Spindeler and Strungaru16, Theorem 6.13]), we take the Mirsky measure for granted and investigate when projections of Mirsky generic configurations are Besicovitch almost periodic. We assume that the reader is familiar with Remark 8.8 in [Reference Keller and Richard13], where the notions of autocorrelation measure, diffraction measure, diffraction spectrum, and generic configuration are discussed in the present framework.

The link between dynamical and diffraction properties is well understood (see, for example, [Reference Baake and Lenz3, Sections 6–8]). Let us specialize this to our needs.

Fact 4.1 [Reference Baake and Lenz3, Sections 6–8]

$({\mathcal M}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}_{\scriptscriptstyle W}, Q_{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}, S)$ has discrete dynamical $L^2$ -spectrum. It also has pure point diffraction spectrum, i.e., its autocorrelation measure $\gamma _{Q_{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}}$ , which is characterized via $\gamma _{Q_{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}}(c_1*c_2)=Q_{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}(\phi _{c_1}\cdot \phi _{c_2})$ for $c_1,c_2\in C_c(G)$ , has a Fourier transform $\widehat {\gamma _{Q_{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}}}$ that is a point measure. The group ${\mathbb S}\subseteq \widehat G$ of dynamical eigenvalues of $({\mathcal M}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}_{\scriptscriptstyle W}, Q_{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}, S)$ is generated by the set of Bragg peak positions, i.e., by those characters $\chi \in \widehat {G}$ for which $\widehat {\gamma _{Q_{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}}}(\{\chi \})\neq 0$ .

Indeed, as $({\mathcal M}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}_{\scriptscriptstyle W}, Q_{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}, S)$ is a factor of the system $({\widetilde {X}},m_{\widetilde {X}}, \widetilde {T})$ with factor map $\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}$ (see [Reference Keller and Richard12, Theorem 2]), and as the latter system has discrete dynamical spectrum, the same is true for $({\mathcal M}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}_{\scriptscriptstyle W}, Q_{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}, S)$ , and pure point diffraction spectrum as well as the remaining assertions follow from [Reference Baake and Lenz3, Theorems 7 and 9] and the Dworkin-type calculation in the proof of Theorem 5(a) in [Reference Baake and Lenz3].

In [Reference Lenz15], this link is analyzed in more detail. Consider an eigenvalue $\chi \in {\mathbb S}$ and denote by $E_{\chi }$ the projection to the subspace of $L^2({\mathcal M}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}_{\scriptscriptstyle W}, Q_{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G})$ generated by an eigenvector having an eigenvalue $\chi $ . If $c_{\chi }(\nu ^{\scriptscriptstyle G}):=(E_{\chi } \phi _{\overline {\chi }\cdot \sigma })(\nu ^{\scriptscriptstyle G})$ does not vanish almost surely, it gives a corresponding measurable eigenfunction (compare the proof of Theorem 3 in [Reference Lenz15]). Here, $\sigma \in C_c(G)$ is any function satisfying $m_G(\sigma )=1$ . Let us define $E_{\chi }=0$ if $\chi \notin {\mathbb S}$ . Then, for any $\chi \in \widehat G$ , the function $|c_{\chi }|$ is $Q_{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}$ -almost surely constant by ergodicity.

Next, consider any van Hove sequence $\mathcal A=(A_n)_{n}$ in G. For an individual configuration $\nu ^{\scriptscriptstyle G}\in {\mathcal M}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}_{\scriptscriptstyle W}$ , the point part in its diffraction is often inferred from the so-called Fourier–Bohr coefficients along ${\mathcal A}$ , which are for $\chi \in \widehat G$ defined by

(4.1) $$ \begin{align} a_{\chi}^{\mathcal A}(\nu^{\scriptscriptstyle G})= \lim_{n\to \infty} \frac{1}{m_G(A_n)} \int_{A_n} \overline{\chi(t)} \, \mathrm{d}\nu^{\scriptscriptstyle G}(t) {,} \end{align} $$

whenever that limit exists. We have the following result.

Fact 4.2 [Reference Lenz15, Theorems 3 and 5]

Consider any $\chi \in \widehat G$ . We then have $\widehat {\gamma _{Q_{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}}}(\{\chi \})=\langle c_{\chi }, c_{\chi }\rangle $ , where $\langle \cdot , \cdot \rangle $ denotes the scalar product on $L^2({\mathcal M}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}_{\scriptscriptstyle W}, Q_{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G})$ . Moreover, for any tempered van Hove sequence $\mathcal A=(A_n)_{n}$ , the limit $a_{\chi }^{\mathcal A}$ along ${\mathcal A}$ in equation (4.1) exists in $L^2({\mathcal M}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}_{\scriptscriptstyle W},Q_{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G})$ . In fact, $a_{\chi }^{\mathcal A}=c_{\chi }$ holds $Q_{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}$ -almost surely.

Remark 4.3 An eigenvalue $\chi \in {\mathbb S}$ may satisfy $\widehat {\gamma _{Q_{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}}}(\{\chi \})=0$ , in which case $\chi $ is called an extinction position. Extinction positions have been observed for the Fibonacci chain (see, e.g., [Reference Baake and Grimm1, Section 9.4.1]), where they reflect an inflation symmetry of the underlying point set. Note that, by Fact 4.2, if $\chi \in {\mathbb S}$ is not an extinction position, i.e., if $\chi \in {\mathbb S}$ is a Bragg peak position, then $\nu ^{\scriptscriptstyle G} \mapsto a_{\chi }^{\mathcal A}(\nu ^{\scriptscriptstyle G})$ defines the eigenfunction $c_{\chi }$ for $\chi $ . On the other hand, if $\chi \in {\mathbb S}$ is an extinction position, then, by Fact 4.1, there exist $\chi _1,\ldots ,\chi _{k}, \chi _{k+1}, \ldots , \chi _n \in {\mathbb S}$ , which are Bragg peak positions so that $\chi = \chi _1 \cdot \cdots \cdot \chi _{k} \cdot \chi _{k+1}^{-1} \cdot \cdots \cdot \chi _n^{-1}$ . In this case, an eigenfunction ${\widetilde c}_{\chi }$ is given by ${\widetilde c}_{\chi } =c_{\chi _1}\cdot \cdots \cdot c_{\chi _k} \cdot \overline {c_{\chi _{k+1}}}\cdot \cdots \cdot \overline {c_{\chi _{n}}} $ .

Remark 4.4 Note that Theorem B2’ explicitly describes the group of eigenvalues of $({\mathcal M}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}_{\scriptscriptstyle W},Q_{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G},S)$ (compare [Reference Lenz15, Chapter 7]). To explain this, denote by ${\mathscr L}^{\circ }\subseteq \widehat G\times \widehat H$ the annihilator of the lattice ${\mathscr L}\subseteq G\times H$ , which is isomorphic to the group dual to ${\widetilde {X}}$ . Furthermore, denote by ${{\mathscr L}^{\circ }}'\subseteq {\mathscr L}^{\circ }$ those characters whose $\widehat H$ -component is $H_W^{Haar}$ -invariant, i.e., we have ${{\mathscr L}^{\circ }}'={\mathscr L}^{\circ } \cap (\widehat G\times (H_W^{Haar})^{\circ })$ , where $(H_W^{Haar})^{\circ }\subseteq \widehat H$ is the annihilator of $H_W^{Haar}$ . Note that ${{\mathscr L}^{\circ }}'$ is isomorphic to the group dual to ${\widetilde {X}'}$ . The same statement holds for its projection $\pi ^{\scriptscriptstyle \widehat {G}}({{\mathscr L}^{\circ }}')$ , as ${\mathscr L}^{\circ }$ projects injectively to $\widehat G$ . Now, Theorem B2’ implies that the group of eigenvalues is $\pi ^{\scriptscriptstyle \widehat {G}}({{\mathscr L}^{\circ }}')$ . Theorem B2’ also provides a way to compute the eigenfunctions via the torus parametrization map (compare the above discussion).

Although the notion of Besicovitch almost periodicity for a measure is known for quite some time [Reference Baake and Moody4, Reference Gouéré8, Reference Lagarias14], it has only recently systematically been studied, in conjunction with other types of almost periodicity [Reference Lenz, Spindeler and Strungaru16]. Fix any van Hove sequence $\mathcal A=(A_n)_{n}$ in G and consider the seminorm $\|\cdot \|_{2,\mathcal A}$ , which is, for any $f\in L^2_{loc}(G)\cap L^{\infty }(G)$ , defined by

$$ \begin{align*} \|f\|_{2,\mathcal A} = \limsup_{n\to\infty} \left(\frac{1}{m_G(A_n)} \int_{A_n} |f(t)|^2 \, \mathrm{d}t\right)^{1/2}. \end{align*} $$

Then f is called Besicovitch almost periodic along ${\mathcal A}$ if f can be approximated by trigonometric polynomials with respect to $\|\cdot \|_{2,\mathcal A}$ (see Definition 3.1 and Proposition 3.7 in [Reference Lenz, Spindeler and Strungaru16]). A translation bounded measure $\nu ^{\scriptscriptstyle G}\in {\mathcal M}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}$ is called Besicovitch almost periodic along $\mathcal {A}$ if the function $\varphi *\nu ^{\scriptscriptstyle G}$ is Besicovitch almost periodic for any $\varphi \in C_c(G)$ (see Definition 3.30 and Remark 3.31 in [Reference Lenz, Spindeler and Strungaru16]). The space of Besicovitch almost periodic measures is denoted by $\mathcal {B}\kern -1pt{\textsf {ap}}_{\mathcal A}(G)$ . This space is important in mathematical diffraction theory as it characterizes pure point diffractive measures in the following sense [Reference Lenz, Spindeler and Strungaru16, Theorem 3.36]. We recall the definition of the autocorrelation $\gamma _{\nu ^{\scriptscriptstyle G}}$ of $\nu ^{\scriptscriptstyle G}$ along ${\mathcal A}$ ,

(4.2) $$ \begin{align} \gamma_{\nu^{\scriptscriptstyle G}} := \lim_{n\to\infty} \frac{1}{m_G(A_n)} \nu^{\scriptscriptstyle G}|_{A_n} * \widetilde{\nu^{\scriptscriptstyle G}|_{A_n}} {,} \end{align} $$

whenever that limit exists. Here, measure reflection is defined by $\widetilde \mu (f)=\overline {\mu (\widetilde {f})}$ , where $\widetilde {f}(x)=\overline {f(-x)}$ .

Fact 4.5 (Cf. [Reference Lenz, Spindeler and Strungaru16, Theorem 3.36])

Fix any van Hove sequence $\mathcal A=(A_n)_{n}$ in G, and let $\nu ^{\scriptscriptstyle G}\in {\mathcal M}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}$ be a translation bounded measure. Then $\nu ^{\scriptscriptstyle G}\in \mathcal {B}\kern -1pt{\textsf {ap}}_{\mathcal A}(G)$ if and only if the following properties hold.

  1. (i) $\nu ^{\scriptscriptstyle G}$ has autocorrelation $\gamma _{\nu ^{\scriptscriptstyle G}}$ along ${\mathcal A}$ , and $\widehat {\gamma _{\nu ^{\scriptscriptstyle G}}}$ is a pure point measure.

  2. (ii) The Fourier–Bohr coefficients $a_{\chi }^{\mathcal A}(\nu ^{\scriptscriptstyle G})$ along ${\mathcal A}$ exist for all $\chi \in \widehat G$ .

  3. (iii) The consistent phase property $\widehat {\gamma _{\nu ^{\scriptscriptstyle G}}}(\{ \chi \})=|a_{\chi }^{\mathcal A}(\nu ^{\scriptscriptstyle G})|^2$ holds for all $\chi \in \widehat G$ .

We can now prove a strengthened version of Theorem 4.1 in [Reference Strungaru23]. To simplify the notation, we denote weighted model combs by

$$ \begin{align*} \nu_{\scriptscriptstyle h}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}({\tilde{x}})= \sum_{y\in (x+{\mathscr L})\cap (G\times H)}h(y_H)\cdot \delta_{y_G} {.} \end{align*} $$

In particular, we have $\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}({\tilde {x}})=\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle 1_W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}({\tilde {x}})$ .

Theorem 4.6 (Cf. [Reference Strungaru23, Theorem 4.1])

Let $W \subseteq H$ be a relatively compact measurable window in some cut-and-project scheme $(G,H, {\mathscr L})$ , where both G and H are second countable. Let $\mathcal {A}=(A_n)_n$ be any van Hove sequence in G. Then the following hold.

  1. (a) $\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}({\tilde {x}})$ is Mirsky 1-generic along $-{\mathcal A}$ if and only if $\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}({\tilde {x}})$ satisfies uniform distribution along ${\mathcal A}$ , i.e., if we have

    $$\begin{align*}\lim_{n\to\infty} \frac{1}{m_G(A_n)} \nu_{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}({\tilde{x}})(A_n) = \mathrm{dens}({\mathscr L}) \cdot m_H(W) \,. \end{align*}$$
  2. (b) $\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}({\tilde {x}})$ is Mirsky 2-generic along $-{\mathcal A}$ if and only if $\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}({\tilde {x}})$ has an autocorrelation $\gamma _{\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}({\tilde {x}})}$ along ${\mathcal A}$ of the form

    $$\begin{align*}\gamma_{\nu_{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}({\tilde{x}})}=\mathrm{dens}({\mathscr L}) \cdot \nu_{\scriptscriptstyle c_W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}(\tilde 0) {,} \end{align*}$$
    where $c_W\in C_c(H)$ is the covariogram function of equation (2.3).
  3. (c) If $\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}({\tilde {x}})$ is Mirsky 2-generic along $-{\mathcal A}$ , then the Fourier transform of $\gamma _{\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}({\tilde {x}})}$ is given by

    where $\eta \in \widehat H$ is uniquely determined by $(\chi ,\eta )\in {\mathscr L}^{\circ }$ , and if $\chi \in \pi ^{\scriptscriptstyle \widehat {G}}({\mathscr L}^{\circ }\backslash {{\mathscr L}^{\circ }}')$ (compare Remark 4.4 for notation). Observe also that .
  4. (d) $\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle W}({\tilde {x}})$ is Mirsky 1-generic along $-{\mathcal A}$ if and only if, for any $\chi \in \pi ^{\scriptscriptstyle \widehat {G}}({\mathscr L}^{\circ })$ , the Fourier–Bohr coefficient of $\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}({\tilde {x}})$ along ${\mathcal A}$ exists and is given by

    (4.3)
    Here, ${\tilde {x}}=(x_G,x_H)+{\mathscr L}$ , and $\eta \in \widehat H$ is uniquely determined by $(\chi ,\eta )\in {\mathscr L}^{\circ }$ (compare Remark 4.4 for notation).
  5. (e) Assume that $\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}({\tilde {x}})$ is Mirsky 2-generic along $-{\mathcal A}$ and $\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle W}({\tilde {x}})$ is Mirsky 1-generic along $-{\mathcal A}$ . Then $\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}({\tilde {x}})$ is Besicovitch almost periodic along ${\mathcal A}$ if and only if $a_{\chi }^{\mathcal A}(\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}({\tilde {x}}))=0$ for all $\chi \in \widehat {G} \backslash \pi ^{\scriptscriptstyle \widehat {G}}({{\mathscr L}^{\circ }})$ .

Remark 4.7 (Relation to dynamical diffraction)

The proof of Theorem 4.6(b) shows that the autocorrelation $\gamma _{\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}({\tilde {x}})}$ agrees with the autocorrelation $\gamma _{Q_{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}}$ of $({\mathcal M}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}_{\scriptscriptstyle W}, Q_{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}, S)$ from Fact 4.1 if and only if $\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}({\tilde {x}})$ is Mirsky 2-generic along $-{\mathcal A}$ .

In dynamical diffraction analysis, people often consider the hull $\overline {\{S_g\nu ^{\scriptscriptstyle G}:g\in G\}}$ associated with a configuration $\nu ^{\scriptscriptstyle G}$ . For any configuration $\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}({\tilde {x}})$ that is Mirsky generic along $-{\mathcal A}$ , its hull ${\mathcal M}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}_{\scriptscriptstyle W}({\tilde {x}})=\overline {\{S_g\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}({\tilde {x}}): g\in G\}}$ has full Mirsky measure $Q_{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}({\mathcal M}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}_{\scriptscriptstyle W}({\tilde {x}}))=1$ . This is seen as in the proof of [Reference Keller and Richard12, Theorem 5(c)]. Thus, in that case, the systems $({\mathcal M}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}_{\scriptscriptstyle W}({\tilde {x}}), Q_{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G},S)$ and $({\mathcal M}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}_{\scriptscriptstyle W}, Q_{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G},S)$ are measure-theoretically isomorphic.

Proof (Proof of Theorem 4.6) Part (a) is Proposition 2.3(a).

For part (b), abbreviate $\omega ^{\scriptscriptstyle G}:=\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}({\tilde {x}})$ and recall that Mirsky 2-genericity of $\omega ^{\scriptscriptstyle G}$ along $-{\mathcal A}$ can be characterized as

$$ \begin{align*} \lim_{n\to\infty} \frac{1}{m_G(A_n)} \int_{-A_n} \phi_{c_1}(S_g \omega^{\scriptscriptstyle G})\cdot \phi_{\overline{c_2}} (S_g \omega^{\scriptscriptstyle G})\, \mathrm{ d}m_G(g)= Q_{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}(\phi_{c_1}\cdot \phi_{\overline{c_2}}) \end{align*} $$

for all $c_1,c_2\in C_c(G)$ , whereas the existence of an autocorrelation $\gamma _{\omega ^{\scriptscriptstyle G}}$ along ${\mathcal A}$ satisfying $(c_1*\widetilde {c_2}*\gamma _{\omega ^{\scriptscriptstyle G}})(0)= Q_{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}(\phi _{c_1}\cdot \phi _{\overline {c_2}})$ for all $c_1,c_2\in C_c(G)$ is equivalent to

$$ \begin{align*} \lim_{n\to\infty} \frac{1}{m_G(A_n)} \left(\omega^{\scriptscriptstyle G}|_{A_n} * \widetilde{\omega^{\scriptscriptstyle G}|_{A_n}}\right)(c_1*\widetilde{c_2}) =Q_{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}(\phi_{c_1}\cdot \phi_{\overline{c_2}}), \quad(c_1,c_2\in C_c(G)) {.} \end{align*} $$

The equality of these two limits, provided one of them exists, is shown in the proof of Theorem 5(a) in [Reference Baake and Lenz3]. (Note that the latter equation appears in that paper on the last line of page 1881.) The identity $Q_{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}(\phi _{c_1}\phi _{\overline {c_2}})= \mathrm {dens}({\mathscr L})\cdot (c_1*\widetilde {c_2}*\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle c_W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}(\tilde 0))(0)$ can be checked similarly to the calculation for two-point patterns in the proof of Remark 3.12 in [Reference Keller and Richard12] (compare [Reference Moody18, Proposition 3]).

Part (c) follows from (b) for $\chi \in \pi ^{\scriptscriptstyle \widehat {G}}({\mathscr L}^{\circ })$ instead of $\chi \in \pi ^{\scriptscriptstyle \widehat {G}}({{\mathscr L}^{\circ }}')$ , e.g., by the Poisson Summation Formula as in [Reference Richard and Strungaru21, Theorem 4.10]. Moreover, note that, since $c_W$ is $H_W^{Haar}$ -periodic, is supported inside $(H_W^{Haar})^{\circ }$ (see, e.g., [Reference Berg and Forst5, Proposition 6.4]). Therefore, if $\chi \in \pi ^{\scriptscriptstyle \widehat {G}}({\mathscr L}^{\circ }\backslash {{\mathscr L}^{\circ }}')$ .

Part (d) is a consequence of Proposition 2.3(b). Indeed, for each $(\chi , \eta ) \in {\mathscr L}^{\circ }$ , consider $y=x+\ell \in x+{\mathscr L}$ and note that

$$ \begin{align*} \eta(y_H)=\eta(x_H+\ell_H)=\chi(x_G) \overline{\chi(x_G)} \eta(x_H)\eta(\ell_H)=\chi(x_G)\eta(x_H)\overline{\chi(y_G)} {,} \end{align*} $$

where we used $\chi (\ell _G)\eta (\ell _H)=1$ . Then

$$ \begin{align*} \begin{aligned} &\frac{((\eta\circ \pi^{\scriptscriptstyle H})\cdot \nu_{\scriptscriptstyle W}({\tilde{x}}))(A_n\times H)}{m_G(A_n)} = \frac{ \sum_{y \in (x+\mathcal L)\cap (A_n \times W)} \eta(y_H) }{m_G(A_n)} \\[6pt] &\qquad =\chi(x_G)\eta(x_H) \frac{ \sum_{y \in (x+\mathcal L)\cap (A_n \times W)} \overline{\chi(y_G) }}{m_G(A_n)} = \frac{\chi(x_G)\eta(x_H)}{m_G(A_n)} \int_{A_n} \overline{\chi(t)} \, \mathrm{d}\nu_{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}({\tilde {x}})(t) {.} \end{aligned} \end{align*} $$

Now, if $\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle W}({\tilde {x}})$ is Mirsky 1-generic along $-{\mathcal A}$ , Proposition 2.3(b) applied to any function $\psi \in C_c(H)$ that agrees with $\eta $ on W gives (4.3). Conversely, assume that (4.3) holds for all $(\chi , \eta ) \in {\mathscr L}^{\circ }$ . Then (2.2) holds for all $\psi \in C_c(H)$ which agree on W with some $\eta \in \pi ^{\scriptscriptstyle \widehat {H}}({\mathscr L}^{\circ })$ , and hence for all linear combinations of such functions. The density of $\pi ^{\scriptscriptstyle \widehat {H}}({\mathscr L}^{\circ })$ in $\widehat {H}$ implies that the set

$$ \begin{align*} A&:= \{ \psi \in C_c(H) : \exists n \in \mathbb N, c_1, \ldots, c_n \in \mathbb C, (\chi_1,\eta_1), \ldots, (\chi_n,\eta_n) \in {\mathscr L}^0 \\ &\hspace{15pt} \mbox{ such that } \psi(h)= \sum_{k=1}^n c_k \eta_k(h) \text{ for all } h \in W \} \end{align*} $$

is an algebra separating the points and hence is dense in $C_0(H)$ . This immediately implies that (2.2) holds for all $\eta \in C_c(H)$ , giving Mirsky 1-genericity for $\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle W}({\tilde {x}})$ .

Part (e) follows from (b)–(d) and Fact 4.5.▪

5 A class of examples

This section focuses on cut-and-project schemes $(G,H,{\mathscr L})$ with relatively compact Borel window $W'=W\backslash V$ , where $V,W\subseteq H$ are compact sets satisfying $V\subseteq W$ . Within that setting, one may construct configurations that illustrate the statements of Theorems B2’ and 4.6, without having a window being compact modulo $0$ or without being of extremal density.

5.1 Results for the general setting

To apply Theorem B2’, one needs to determine the Haar periods of $W'$ . In that context, the following notion appears to be relevant.

Definition 5.1 (Haar thinness)

Let H be a locally compact group (LCA) group with Haar measure $m_H$ . Consider Borel sets $V\subseteq W\subseteq H$ . We say that V is Haar thin in W if for all open $U\subseteq H$ such that $m_H(U\cap V)>0$ we have $m_H(U\cap V)<m_H(U\cap W)$ .

Lemma 5.2 If V is Haar thin in W and $m_H(V)>0$ , then $W\backslash V$ is not compact modulo $0$ .

Proof Suppose for a contradiction that $W\backslash V=K$ modulo $0$ for some compact $K\subseteq H$ . For any open $U\subseteq H$ , by Haar thinness, $m_H(U\cap K)=m_H(U\cap W\backslash V)=0$ if and only if $m_H(U\cap W)=0$ . As H is second countable, this implies that $K=W$ modulo $0$ , i.e., $m_H(V)=0$ in contradiction to the assumption $m_H(V)>0$ .▪

Lemma 5.3 (Haar periods)

Let H be an LCA group with Haar measure $m_H$ . Let $W\subseteq H$ be compact, and assume that the Borel set $V\subseteq W$ is Haar thin in W. Then $W'=W\backslash V$ satisfies

$$ \begin{align*} H_{W'}^{Haar}=H_{W}^{Haar}\cap H_{V}^{Haar} {.} \end{align*} $$

Proof Recall that $h\in H_W^{Haar}$ if and only if $m_H((W+h)\backslash W)=0$ . The inclusion $H_{W}^{Haar}\cap H_{V}^{Haar}\subseteq H_{W'}^{Haar}$ can be inferred from the standard estimate $(W'+h)\backslash W'\subseteq ((W+h)\backslash W) \cup (V\backslash (V+h))$ . For the reverse inclusion, fix arbitrary $h\in H_{W'}^{Haar}$ and note that

$$ \begin{align*} m_H((W+h)\backslash W) &= m_H((W'+h)\backslash W)+ m_H((V+h)\backslash W) \\ &= m_H((V+h)\backslash V) {,} \end{align*} $$

where we used $m_H((V+h)\cap W')=m_H((V+h)\cap (W'+h))=0$ in the second equation. To conclude the argument, note first that $0=m_H(W'\backslash W)=m_H((W'+h)\backslash W)$ . As V is Haar thin in the compact set W, by shift invariance of $m_H$ , this implies that $0=m_H((V+h)\backslash W)=m_H((W+h)\backslash W)$ . Hence, $h \in H_W^{Haar}\cap H_V^{Haar}$ .▪

One may now consider examples $\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle W'}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}({\tilde {x}})$ constructed from maximal density configurations $\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}({\tilde {x}})$ and $\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle V}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}({\tilde {x}})$ . As their diffraction can be explicitly computed in particular examples such as k-free integers (see, e.g., the references given in [Reference Huck and Richard9, Section 5]), these may serve to illustrate the statements in Theorem 4.6.

Lemma 5.4 (Diffraction)

Let $(G,H,{\mathscr L})$ be a cut-and-project scheme with two compact windows $V\subseteq W\subseteq H$ . Assume that, for given ${\tilde {x}}\in {\widetilde {X}}$ , both $\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle V}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}({\tilde {x}})$ and $\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}({\tilde {x}})$ have maximal density along the same averaging sequence, i.e., there exists a van Hove sequence ${\mathcal A}=(A_n)_n$ in G such that

$$ \begin{align*} \begin{aligned} \lim_{n\to\infty} \frac{1}{m_G(A_n)}\nu_{\scriptscriptstyle V}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}({\tilde{x}})(A_n)&=\mathrm{dens}({\mathscr L})\cdot m_H(V) {,}\\ \lim_{n\to\infty} \frac{1}{m_G(A_n)}\nu_{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}({\tilde{x}})(A_n)&=\mathrm{dens}({\mathscr L})\cdot m_H(W) {.} \end{aligned} \end{align*} $$

Consider $W'=W\backslash V$ . Then the following hold.

  1. (a) $\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle W'}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}({\tilde {x}})$ is Besicovitch almost periodic along ${\mathcal A}$ .

  2. (b) $\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle W'}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}({\tilde {x}})$ has Fourier–Bohr coefficients along ${\mathcal A}$ given by

  3. (c) $\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle W'}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}({\tilde {x}})$ has autocorrelation and diffraction along ${\mathcal A}$ given by

Remark 5.5 (Mirsky genericity)

In conjunction with Theorem 4.6, the previous result implies that $\nu _{W'}({\tilde {x}})$ is Mirsky 1-generic along $-{\mathcal A}$ , and that $\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle W'}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}({\tilde {x}})$ is Mirsky 2-generic along $-{\mathcal A}$ . Using approximation by regular model sets as in [Reference Baake, Huck and Strungaru2, Reference Strungaru23], one may, in fact, show that $\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle W'}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}({\tilde {x}})$ is Mirsky generic along $-{\mathcal A}$ , without resorting to Besicovitch almost periodicity.

Proof (Proof of Lemma 5.4) By [Reference Lenz, Spindeler and Strungaru16, Proposition 3.39], both $\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}({\tilde {x}})$ and $\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle V}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}({\tilde {x}})$ are Besicovitch almost periodic. Hence, $\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle W'}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}({\tilde {x}})=\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}({\tilde {x}})-\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle V}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}({\tilde {x}})$ is Besicovitch almost periodic (compare [Reference Lenz, Spindeler and Strungaru16, Proposition 3.8]). This proves (a).

As to part (b), note that we have

$$\begin{align*}a_{\chi}^{\mathcal A}(\nu_{\scriptscriptstyle W'}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}({\tilde{x}}))= a_{\chi}^{\mathcal A}(\nu_{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}({\tilde{x}}))-a_{\chi}^{\mathcal A}(\nu_{\scriptscriptstyle V}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}({\tilde{x}})) {.} \end{align*}$$

Hence, (b) follows from [Reference Lenz, Spindeler and Strungaru16, Corollary 3.40] applied to $\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}({\tilde {x}})$ and $\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle V}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}({\tilde {x}})$ .

The proof of part (c) only uses the validity of parts (a) and (b), but not the maximal density assumptions of the lemma: The diffraction formula

follows from (a), (b), and Fact 4.5. On the other hand, Lemma 3.6 and Theorem 4.10 in [Reference Richard and Strungaru21] give that $\gamma =\mathrm {dens}({\mathscr L}) \cdot \nu _{\scriptscriptstyle c_{W'}}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}(\tilde 0)$ is Fourier transformable and

We thus get $\gamma =\gamma _{\nu _{\scriptscriptstyle W'}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}({\tilde {x}})}$ from double Fourier transformability [Reference Richard and Strungaru21, Theorem 4.12]. Since $c_{W'}$ is $H_{W'}^{Haar}$ -periodic, we can restrict the summation over $\pi ^{\scriptscriptstyle \widehat {G}}({{\mathscr L}^{\circ }})$ to $\pi ^{\scriptscriptstyle \widehat {G}}({{\mathscr L}^{\circ }}')$ . This proves (c).▪

5.2 An example from ${\mathscr B}$ -free sets

Assume that H is compact. Then any weak model set is a subset of the lattice $\Lambda _H$ . The trivial choice $W=H$ leads to comparing a weak model set $\Lambda _V$ to its lattice complement $\Lambda _{H\backslash V}$ . This applies to the so-called sets of multiples, which are usually studied dynamically through their complementary ${\mathscr B}$ -free sets (see [Reference Dymek, Kasjan, Kułaga-Przymus and Lemańczyk6, Reference Kasjan, Keller and Lemańczyk10]).

For an example beyond extremal density, let us consider the set of cube-free integers that are not square-free. An appropriate cut-and-project scheme $({\mathbb Z}, H, \mathcal {L})$ has compact internal space $H= \prod _{p \in \mathcal {P}} {\mathbb Z}/(p^3{\mathbb Z})$ , with $\mathcal P$ denoting the set of all primes. Moreover, $\mathcal {L}= \{ (n, \Delta (n) ) : n \in {\mathbb Z} \}$ , where $\Delta : {\mathbb Z} \to H$ denotes the natural embedding $ \Delta (n)=(n,n,n,\ldots )\in H$ . Consider the compact sets $V \subseteq W\subseteq H$ given by

$$ \begin{align*} W= \prod_{p \in \mathcal{P}}\left( {\mathbb Z}/(p^3{\mathbb Z}) \backslash \{ 0 \} \right) \ {,} \qquad V= \prod_{p \in \mathcal{P}}\left( {\mathbb Z}/(p^3{\mathbb Z}) \backslash \{ 0, p^2, 2 p^2, \ldots, (p-1)p^2 \} \right)\kern-1pt {.} \end{align*} $$

Then $\Lambda _{V}$ and $\Lambda _{W}$ are the sets of square-free integers and cube-free integers, respectively, and $\Lambda _{W'}$ is the set of integers that are cube-free, but not square-free.

Note that $W'$ is Haar aperiodic and fails to be compact modulo $0$ . Together with Lemmas 5.2 and 5.3, this is an immediate consequence of the following result. Recall that W is Haar regular if $U\cap W\ne \varnothing $ implies that $m_H(U\cap W)>0$ for any open $U\subseteq H$ (see [Reference Keller and Richard13, Definition 3.10]).

Lemma 5.6 Both V and W are Haar regular, and V is Haar thin in W. Moreover, W is Haar aperiodic.

Proof Both Haar regularity and Haar thinness can be checked by restricting to open cylinder sets $U_S(h)\subseteq H$ as defined in [Reference Kasjan, Keller and Lemańczyk10], for $h\in H$ and finite $S\subset \{p^3:p\in {\mathcal P}\}$ . However, for those cylinder sets, the claims are obvious due to the product structure of $m_H$ . For Haar regularity of W, note that $m_H(W)>0$ by positive density of cube-free integers. Thus, $m_H(U_S(h)\cap W)>0$ for $h\in W$ , as intersecting by $U_S(h)$ affects only finite many coordinates. An analogous argument shows Haar regularity of V. A similar argument also shows Haar thinness, noting that $m_H(W)>0$ implies $m_H(W')>0$ . As W clearly is aperiodic, Haar aperiodicity follows from Haar regularity by [Reference Keller and Richard13, Remark 3.12].▪

Note further that both $\Lambda _V$ and $\Lambda _W$ are weak model sets of maximal density with respect to $A_n=[-n,n]$ (see, e.g., [Reference Huck and Richard9, Section 5.2] and the references therein). Moreover, the window $W'$ satisfies $(W')^{\circ }=\varnothing $ and $\overline {W'}=W$ . For the latter claim, note that, due to $\overline {W'}\subseteq W=V\cup \overline {W'}$ , it suffices to show that $V\subseteq \overline {W'}$ . However, this is obvious as V is Haar regular and Haar thin in W.

To summarize, the example $\Lambda _{W'}$ of cube-free integers that are not square-free has a window $W'$ that is not compact modulo $0$ . As $W'$ is Haar aperiodic, Theorem B1’ applies. Thus, the dynamical spectrum of the Mirsky measure $Q_{\scriptscriptstyle W'}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}$ equals $\pi ^{\scriptscriptstyle \widehat {G}}({\mathscr L}^{\circ })$ . It thus coincides with the dynamical spectrum of the Mirsky measure $Q_{\scriptscriptstyle W}^{\scriptscriptstyle G}$ of cube-free integers. Note that the dynamical spectrum can be identified with the discrete group $\widehat H$ . Whereas $\Lambda _{W'}$ fails to have extremal density along ${\mathcal A}$ , both Theorem 4.6 and Remark 4.7 apply to $\Lambda _{W'}$ , due to Lemma 5.4 and Remark 5.5.

Acknowledgment

We thank the referee for useful comments and a pertinent question, which have substantially improved the manuscript.

Footnotes

Dedicated to Bob Moody on the occasion of his 80th birthday

N.S. was supported by the Natural Sciences and Engineering Council of Canada (NSERC) via Grant No. 2020-00038, and he is grateful for the support.

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