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Similarities and differences between specification and non-uniform specification

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 April 2024

WANSHAN LIN*
Affiliation:
School of Mathematical Sciences, Fudan University, Shanghai 200433, PR China (e-mail: xuetingtian@fudan.edu.cn, 23110180052@m.fudan.edu.cn)
XUETING TIAN
Affiliation:
School of Mathematical Sciences, Fudan University, Shanghai 200433, PR China (e-mail: xuetingtian@fudan.edu.cn, 23110180052@m.fudan.edu.cn)
CHENWEI YU
Affiliation:
School of Mathematical Sciences, Fudan University, Shanghai 200433, PR China (e-mail: xuetingtian@fudan.edu.cn, 23110180052@m.fudan.edu.cn)
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Abstract

Pavlov [Adv. Math. 295 (2016), 250–270; Nonlinearity 32 (2019), 2441–2466] studied the measures of maximal entropy for dynamical systems with weak versions of specification property and found the existence of intrinsic ergodicity would be influenced by the assumptions of the gap functions. Inspired by these, in this article, we study the dynamical systems with non-uniform specification property. We give some basic properties these systems have and give an assumption for the gap functions to ensure the systems have the following five properties: CO-measures are dense in invariant measures; for every non-empty compact connected subset of invariant measures, its saturated set is dense in the total space; ergodic measures are residual in invariant measures; ergodic measures are connected; and entropy-dense. In addition, we will give examples to show the assumption is optimal.

Type
Original Article
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press

1. Introduction

Throughout this paper, suppose that $(X,T)$ is a topological dynamical system, which means that $(X,d)$ is a compact metric space and $T:X \rightarrow X$ is a continuous map. Let $\mathcal {M}(X)$ , $\mathcal {M}_T(X)$ , and $\mathcal {M}_T^{\mathrm {erg}}(X)$ denote the space of Borel probability measures, T-invariant Borel probability measures, and T-ergodic Borel probability measures, respectively. Let $\mathbb {Z}$ , $\mathbb {N}_0$ , and $\mathbb {N}$ denote integers, non-negative integers, and positive integers, respectively. Let $C(X)$ denote the space of real continuous functions on X with the norm $\|\varphi \|:=\sup _{x\in X}|\varphi (x)|$ for any $\varphi \in C(X)$ . A subset of a Baire space is said to be residual if it has a dense $G_\delta $ subset.

Let $\rho $ be the first Wasserstein metric on $\mathcal {M}(X)$ , a metrization of the weak $^\ast $ topology of $\mathcal {M}(X)$ , see [Reference Villani33] for more information. By [Reference Villani33, p. 95, equation (6.3)], for any $\mu ,\nu \in \mathcal {M}(X)$ ,

(1.1) $$ \begin{align} \rho(\mu,\nu)=\sup_{f\in\mathrm{Lip}^1(X)}\bigg|\!\int_Xf\,{d}\mu-\int_Xf\,{d}\nu\bigg|, \end{align} $$

where $\mathrm {Lip}^1(X)$ is the space of all real Lipschitz continuous functions on X, whose Lipschitz constants are bounded by $1$ . Then we have $\rho (\delta _x,\delta _y)=d(x,y)$ for any $x,y\in X$ .

Given $x\in X$ , for any $n\in \mathbb {N}$ , denote $\delta _x^n:= ({1}/{n}) \sum \nolimits _{i=0}^{n-1}\delta _{T^ix}$ . Let $V_T(x)$ denote the set of accumulation points of $\{\delta _x^n:n\geq 1\}$ , then $V_T(x)$ is a non-empty compact connected subset of $\mathcal {M}_T(X)$ [Reference Denker, Grillenberger and Sigmund8, Proposition 3.8]. For any non-empty compact connected subset $K\subset \mathcal {M}_T(X)$ , denote $G_K:=\{x\in X: V_T(x)=K\}$ (called saturated set) and ${G^K:= \{x\in X: V_T(x)\supset K\}}$ . For convenience, when $K=\{\mu \}$ for some $\mu \in \mathcal {M}_T(X)$ , we denote $G_\mu =G_{\{\mu \}}$ , $G^\mu =G^{\{\mu \}}$ , and every $x\in G_\mu $ is called a generic point of $\mu $ .

Specification-like properties, which were first considered by Bowen [Reference Bowen3] in the study of Axiom A diffeomorphisms, play important roles in the study of uniqueness of equilibrium states, density of periodic measures, the existence of saturated sets, etc. The existence of saturated sets was proved by Sigmund [Reference Sigmund30] for systems with uniform hyperbolicity or specification property and generalized to systems with non-uniform hyperbolicity [Reference Liang, Sun and Tian19], g-almost product property [Reference Pfister and Sullivan26], and asymptotic average shadowing property [Reference Dong, Tian and Yuan9]. In addition, the notions of closability and linkability were introduced by Gelfert and Kwietniak in [Reference Gelfert and Kwietniak12] to give a general method to show the density of periodic measures in the ergodic measures and the existence of saturated sets. We refer to [Reference Kwietniak, Ła̧cka, Oprocha, Kolyada, Möller, Moree and Ward16] for a survey of many results for specification-like properties.

In this article, we mainly consider dynamical systems with the non-uniform specification property.

Definition 1.1. We say that a dynamical system $(X,T)$ satisfies the non-uniform specification property with $M(n,\varepsilon )$ if the following holds: there exists a function $M(n,\varepsilon ):\mathbb {N}\times (0,\infty )\rightarrow \mathbb {N}$ , such that:

  • $M(n,\varepsilon )$ is non-decreasing with n and non-increasing with $\varepsilon $ ;

  • for any integer $k\geq 2$ , for any points $x_1,\ldots ,x_k\in X$ , for any non-negative integers $a_1,b_1,\ldots ,a_k,b_k$ with

    $$ \begin{align*} a_1\leq b_1<\cdots<a_k\leq b_k \end{align*} $$
    and
    $$ \begin{align*} a_{i+1}-b_i\geq M(b_i-a_i+1,\varepsilon)\quad\text{for } 1\leq i\leq k-1, \end{align*} $$
    there exists a point $z\in X$ such that
    $$ \begin{align*} d(T^{n-a_i}x_i,T^nz)\leq\varepsilon\quad\text{for } a_i\leq n\leq b_i,1\leq i\leq k. \end{align*} $$

If further, for any integer p with $p\geq b_k-a_1+M(b_k-a_k+1,\varepsilon )$ , z can be chosen as a periodic point with $T^pz=z$ , then we say that $(X,T)$ satisfies the non-uniform periodic specification property with $M(n,\varepsilon )$ .

Remark 1.2

  1. (1) This definition is modified from the definitions of weak specification property [Reference Kwietniak, Ła̧cka, Oprocha, Kolyada, Möller, Moree and Ward16, Definition 14] and non-uniform specification for subshifts [Reference Pavlov23, Definition 2.14]. In fact, the weak specification property is equivalent to the non-uniform specification property with $\sup _{\varepsilon>0}\lim \nolimits _{n\to \infty } ({M(n,\varepsilon )}/{n})=0$ . Compared with many other definitions of specification-like properties, in this definition, we do not give the assumptions of the asymptotic behavior of $M(n,\varepsilon )$ . In particular, when $M(n,\varepsilon )=M(1,\varepsilon )=M(\varepsilon )$ for any $n\in \mathbb {N}$ , the definition of non-uniform (periodic) specification property with $M(n,\varepsilon )$ is consistent with the definition of (periodic) specification property with $M(\varepsilon )$ .

  2. (2) The weak specification property was first used by Marcus [Reference Marcus22] without a name to show the density of periodic measures in the invariant measures for ergodic toral automorphisms. It was consistent with the almost weak specification property introduced by Dateyama [Reference Dateyama, Prokhorov and Itô7]. A remarkable result for dynamical systems with weak specification property is the universality, which was first shown by Quas and Soo [Reference Quas and Soo27] under additional conditions: asymptotic entropy expansiveness and the small boundary property; later, Burguet [Reference Burguet4] proved that these additional conditions can be removed.

Let $|A|$ denote the cardinality of the set A. According to Lemma 2.11, if ${|X|\geq 2}$ and $(X,T)$ satisfies the non-uniform specification property with $M(n,\varepsilon )$ , then $\lim \nolimits _{\varepsilon \rightarrow 0}M(1,\varepsilon )=\infty $ .

Let $\mathrm {Per}_n(T):=\{x\in X:T^nx=x\}$ denote the set of periodic points of period n and $\mathrm {Per}(T):=\bigcup _{n\geq 1}\mathrm {Per}_n(T)$ denote the set of periodic points. Following [Reference Denker, Grillenberger and Sigmund8, Definition 21.7], a measure supported on the orbit of a periodic point x is called a CO-measure of x and the set of CO-measures is denoted by

$$ \begin{align*} \mathcal{M}_T^{\mathrm{co}}(X):=\bigcup_{n\geq1}\mathcal{M}_{T,n}^{\mathrm{co}}(X), \end{align*} $$

where

$$ \begin{align*} \mathcal{M}_{T,n}^{\mathrm{co}}(X):=\{\delta_x^n:x\in \mathrm{Per}_n(T), n\geq1\}.\end{align*} $$

It is clear that we always have the following:

$$ \begin{align*} \mathcal{M}_T^{\mathrm{co}}(X)\subset\mathcal{M}_T^{\mathrm{erg}}(X)\subset\mathcal{M}_T(X).\end{align*} $$

The phenomenon that $\overline {\mathcal {M}_T^{\mathrm {co}}(X)}=\mathcal {M}_T(X)$ was shown by Sigmund [Reference Sigmund29] to occur for Axiom A diffeomorphisms. Afterward, a similar result was extended by Hirayama [Reference Hirayama13] to $C^{1+\alpha }$ diffeomorphism preserving mixing hyperbolic measures. More precisely, given a $C^{1+\alpha }$ diffeomorphism preserving a mixing hyperbolic measure $\mu $ , there exists $\Lambda $ with $\mu (\Lambda )=1$ such that the set of CO-measures supported by hyperbolic periodic points is dense in the set of invariant measures supported by $\Lambda $ . After that, it was shown by Liang et al [Reference Liang, Liu and Sun18] that the assumption of mixing can be removed. In the $C^1$ case, it was shown by Abdenur et al [Reference Abdenur, Bonatti and Crovisier1], for an isolated non-trivial transitive set $\Lambda $ of a $C^1$ -generic diffeomorphism f, $\overline {\mathcal {M}_T^{\mathrm {co}}(\Lambda )}=\mathcal {M}_T(\Lambda )$ . Moreover, it was shown by Gelfert and Kwietniak [Reference Gelfert and Kwietniak12] that $\overline {\mathcal {M}_T^{\mathrm {co}}(X)}=\mathcal {M}_T(X)$ provided that $\mathrm {Per}(T)$ is linkable and $\overline {\mathcal {M}_T^{\mathrm {co}}(X)}=\overline {\mathcal {M}_T^{\mathrm {erg}}(X)}$ . Recently, it was shown by Hou et al [Reference Hou, Tian and Yuan15] that for transitive dynamical systems satisfying the periodic shadowing property, the CO-measures with large supports are dense in invariant measures.

For any $\mu \in \mathcal {M}_T(X)$ , let $S_\mu :=\{x\in X:\mu (U)>0\text { for any neighborhood }U\text { of }x\}$ denote the support of $\mu $ . Let $C_T(X):=\overline {\bigcup _{\mu \in \mathcal {M}_T(X)}S_\mu }$ denote the measure center of $(X,T)$ . Let $h_{\mathrm {top}}(T)$ denote the topological entropy of $(X,T)$ . Given $\delta>0$ and $n\in \mathbb {N}$ , let

$$ \begin{align*}\mathcal{M}_{T,n,\delta}^{\mathrm{co}}(X):=\{\mu\in\mathcal{M}_{T,n}^{\mathrm{co}}(X):d_H(S_\mu,X)<\delta\},\end{align*} $$
$$ \begin{align*}\mathcal{M}_{T,\delta}^{\mathrm{co}}(X):=\bigcup_{n\geq1}\mathcal{M}_{T,n,\delta}^{\mathrm{co}}(X), \end{align*} $$

and

$$ \begin{align*}\mathrm{Per}_{n,\delta}(T):=\{x\in\mathrm{Per}_n(T):\delta_x^n\in \mathcal{M}_{T,n,\delta}^{\mathrm{co}}(X)\}, \end{align*} $$

where $d_H$ is the Hausdorff distance.

A topological dynamical system $(X,T)$ is said to be positively expansive if there exists $c>0$ , which is called a positively expansive constant, such that $x\neq y\in X$ implies $d(T^nx,T^ny)>c$ for some $n\in \mathbb {N}_0$ . If further T is a homeomorphism, $(X,T)$ is said to be expansive if there exists $c>0$ , which is called an expansive constant, such that $x\neq y\in X$ implies $d(T^nx,T^ny)>c$ for some $n\in \mathbb {Z}$ . Inspired by these, we introduce the notion of pseudo-expansiveness. A topological dynamical system $(X,T)$ is said to be pseudo-expansive if there exists $c>0$ , which is called a pseudo-expansive constant, such that for any $x,y\in X$ , $\limsup \nolimits _{i\to \infty }d(T^ix,T^iy)>0$ implies $d(T^nx,T^ny)>c$ for some $n\in \mathbb {N}_0$ . Directly from the definition, pseudo-expansiveness is weaker than positively expansiveness. In fact, pseudo-expansiveness is also weaker than expansiveness, see Lemma 2.5.

For any $f\in C(X)$ , denote the f-irregular set by

$$ \begin{align*} I_{f}(T) := \bigg\{x\in X: \lim_{n\to\infty}\frac1n\sum_{i=0}^{n-1}f(T^ix) \text{ diverges}\bigg\}, \end{align*} $$

and

$$ \begin{align*} \mathcal{C}(T):=\{f\in C(X):I_{f}(T)\neq\emptyset \}. \end{align*} $$

As for dynamical systems with specification-like properties, the f-irregular set has been studied a lot in the sense of residuality, topological entropy, topological pressure, metric mean dimension, and so on. For examples, the f-irregular set is either empty or residual in X for dynamical systems satisfying the specification property [Reference Li and Wu17]; is either empty or carrying full topological entropy for dynamical systems satisfying the specification property [Reference Chen, Küpper and Shu5] or almost specification property [Reference Thompson32]; is either empty or carrying full topological pressure for dynamical systems satisfying the specification property [Reference Thompson31] or gluing orbit property [Reference Lima and Varandas20]; is either empty or carrying full metric mean dimension for dynamical systems satisfying the gluing orbit property [Reference Lima and Varandas20] or almost weak specification property [Reference Liu and Liu21].

According to Theorem 3.2, when $(X,T)$ satisfies the non-uniform periodic specification property, we always have the following:

  1. (1) $\overline {\mathrm {Per}(T)}=X$ and $C_T(X)=X$ ;

  2. (2) $(X,T)$ is topologically mixing;

  3. (3) if $(X,T)$ is pseudo-expansive, then

    $$ \begin{align*} h_{\mathrm{top}}(T)\geq\limsup_{n\to\infty}\frac{1}{n}\log|\mathrm{Per}_{n}(T)|; \end{align*} $$
  4. (4) for every compact subset $K\subset \mathcal {M}_T(X)$ with $G^K\neq \emptyset $ , we have $G^K$ is residual in X. If further, $(X,T)$ is pseudo-expansive, then for every non-empty compact connected subset $K\subset \mathcal {M}_T(X)$ with $G_K\neq \emptyset $ , $G_K$ is dense in X.

    If further, $|X|\geq 2$ , then

  5. (5) $h_{\mathrm {top}}(T)>0$ and for any $\delta>0$ ,

    $$ \begin{align*} \limsup_{n\to\infty}\frac{1}{n}\log|\mathrm{Per}_{n}(T)|\geq \limsup_{n\to\infty}\frac{1}{n}\log|\mathrm{Per}_{n,\delta}(T)|>0; \end{align*} $$
  6. (6) $(X,T)$ is DC2 chaotic;

  7. (7) $(X,T)$ is Devaney chaotic;

  8. (8) $\mathcal {C}(T)\neq \emptyset $ and $\bigcap _{f\in \mathcal {C}(T)}I_f(T)$ is residual in X.

The definitions of DC2 chaos and Devaney chaos can be found in §2.7.

Given $\mu \in \mathcal {M}_T(X)$ , let $h_\mu (T)$ denote the metric entropy of $\mu $ . Here, $\mu $ is said to be a measure of maximal entropy if $h_{\mu }(T)=h_{\mathrm {top}}(T)$ . A dynamical system $(X,T)$ is said to be intrinsically ergodic if there exists a unique measure of maximal entropy. The intrinsic ergodicity of subshifts having the non-uniform specification property with $\sup _{\varepsilon>0}\lim \nolimits _{n\rightarrow \infty }({M(n,\varepsilon )}/{n})=0$ was studied by Pavlov [Reference Pavlov23]. It was shown in [Reference Pavlov23] by giving examples, when $\inf _{\varepsilon>0}\liminf \nolimits _{n\to \infty }({M(n,\varepsilon )}/{\log n})>0$ , we cannot guarantee the subshifts are intrinsically ergodic. After that, in [Reference Pavlov24], the controlled specification property with gap function $f(n)$ was introduced by Pavlov and $\liminf \nolimits _{n\to \infty }({f(n)}/{n})=0$ was proved to be the critical condition to guarantee the intrinsic ergodicity. Inspired by these, the goal of this article is to study that under which assumptions of $M(n,\varepsilon )$ , a dynamical system $(X,T)$ satisfying non-uniform periodic specification property with $M(n,\varepsilon )$ has the following ergodic properties:

  1. (R1) $\mathcal {M}_T^{\mathrm {co}}(X)$ is dense in $\mathcal {M}_T(X)$ ;

  2. (R2) for any non-empty compact connected subset $K\subset \mathcal {M}_T(X)$ , $G_K$ is dense in X;

  3. (R3) $\mathcal {M}_T^{\mathrm {erg}}(X)$ is residual in $\mathcal {M}_T(X)$ ;

  4. (R4) $\mathcal {M}_T^{\mathrm {erg}}(X)$ is connected;

  5. (R5) $(X,T)$ is entropy-dense.

Remark 1.3. Since $\mathcal {M}_T^{\mathrm {erg}}(X)$ is the set of extreme points of $\mathcal {M}_T(X)$ [Reference Denker, Grillenberger and Sigmund8, Proposition 5.6] and is a $G_\delta $ subset of $\mathcal {M}_T(X)$ [Reference Denker, Grillenberger and Sigmund8, Proposition 5.7], $\mathcal {M}_T(X)$ is a Choquet simplex [Reference Shinoda28, §2.2], when $(X,T)$ is not uniquely ergodic, property (R3) is equal to that $\mathcal {M}_T(X)$ is a Poulsen simplex, that is, a non-trivial Choquet simplex whose extreme points are dense in it, see [Reference Kwietniak, Ła̧cka, Oprocha, Kolyada, Möller, Moree and Ward16, §1.3] for more information.

When $\sup _{\varepsilon>0}\liminf \nolimits _{n\rightarrow \infty } ({M(n,\varepsilon )}/{n}) =0$ , according to Theorems 3.4 and 3.6, properties (R1), (R2), (R3), (R4), and (R5) hold.

When $\sup _{\varepsilon>0}\liminf \nolimits _{n\rightarrow \infty }({M(n,\varepsilon )}/{n}) > 0$ , we cannot guarantee that properties (R1), (R2), (R3), (R4), or (R5) hold. More precisely, we have the following theorems.

Theorem A. Let $M(n,\varepsilon ):\mathbb {N}\times (0,\infty )\rightarrow \mathbb {N}$ be a function such that $M(n,\varepsilon )$ is non-decreasing with n and non-increasing with $\varepsilon $ . Suppose

$$ \begin{align*} \lim_{\varepsilon\rightarrow0}M(1,\varepsilon)=\infty \end{align*} $$

and

$$ \begin{align*} \sup_{\varepsilon>0}\liminf_{n\rightarrow\infty}\frac{M(n,\varepsilon)}{n}>0. \end{align*} $$

Then there exist $c_0>0$ and a cluster of dynamical systems $\{(X_c,T_c)\}_{0<c\leq c_0}$ satisfying the non-uniform periodic specification property with $M(n,\varepsilon )$ , such that for any $0<c\leq c_0$ :

  1. (1)

    $$ \begin{align*} \overline{\mathcal{M}_{T_c}^{\mathrm{co}}(X_c)} =\overline{\mathcal{M}_{T_c}^{\mathrm{erg}}(X_c)} \subsetneq\mathcal{M}_{T_c}(X_c) \end{align*} $$
    and
    $$ \begin{align*} \overline{\mathcal{M}_{T_c,\delta}^{\mathrm{co}}(X_c)} \subsetneq\overline{\mathcal{M}_{T_c}^{\mathrm{co}}(X_c)} \end{align*} $$
    for $\delta>0$ sufficiently small;
  2. (2)

    $$ \begin{align*} h_{\mathrm{top}}(T_c)=\lim_{n\rightarrow\infty}\frac1n\log|\mathrm{Per}_{n,\delta}(T_c)|>0, \end{align*} $$
    for any $\delta>0$ ;
  3. (3) $(X_c,T_c)$ does not satisfy properties (R4) and (R5).

Theorem B. For the cluster of dynamical systems $\{(X_c,T_c)\}_{0<c\leq c_0}$ from Theorem A and any $0<c\leq c_0$ , there exists some $\mu \in \mathcal {M}_{T_c}(X_c)$ with $G_{\mu }=\emptyset $ . Moreover, there exists a non-empty open subset $\mathcal {U}=\mathcal {M}_{T_c}(X_c)\setminus \overline {\mathcal {M}_{T_c}^{\mathrm {co}}(X_c)}$ , such that:

  1. (1) if $\mu \in \mathcal {U}$ , then $G_{\mu }=\emptyset $ ;

  2. (2) if $\mu \notin \mathcal {U}$ , then $G_{\mu }$ is dense in $X_c$ ;

  3. (3) there exists $\mu _0\in \mathcal {U}$ such that $G^{\mu _0}$ is residual in $X_c$ .

1.1. Organization of this paper

In §2, we will introduce some preliminary results. In §3, we will study some basic properties of dynamical systems with non-uniform specification property. In §4, we will prove Theorem A by constructing a cluster of subshifts of $\{0,1\}^{\mathbb {N}_0}$ . In §5, we will prove Theorem B by using the cluster of subshifts constructed in §4.

2. Preliminaries

2.1. The first Wasserstein metric on $\mathcal {M}(X)$

Let $\rho $ be the first Wasserstein metric on $\mathcal {M}(X)$ , then the following can be easily checked by using equation (1.1).

Proposition 2.1

  1. (1) Given $\mu ,\mu _1,\ldots ,\mu _t\in \mathcal {M}(X)$ and $0\leq s_1,\ldots ,s_t\leq 1$ with $\sum _{i=1}^{t}s_i=1$ , then

    $$ \begin{align*} \rho\bigg(\mu,\sum_{i=1}^{t}s_i\mu_i\bigg)\leq\sum_{i=1}^{t}s_i\rho(\mu,\mu_i). \end{align*} $$
  2. (2) Given $\mu _1,\ldots ,\mu _t,\nu _1,\ldots ,\nu _t\in \mathcal {M}(X)$ and $0\leq s_1,\ldots ,s_t\leq 1$ with $\sum _{i=1}^{t}s_i=1$ , then

    $$ \begin{align*} \rho\bigg(\sum_{i=1}^{t}s_i\mu_i, \sum_{i=1}^{t}s_i\nu_i\bigg) \leq\sum_{i=1}^{t}s_i\rho(\mu_i,\nu_i). \end{align*} $$

Lemma 2.2. For any $0\leq \varepsilon ,\delta \leq 1$ and any two sequences $\{x_i\}_{i=0}^{n-1}$ , $\{y_i\}_{i=0}^{n-1}$ of X, let $\Lambda =\{0\leq i\leq n-1:d(x_i,y_i)\leq \varepsilon \}$ . If $(n-|\Lambda|)/n\leq \delta $ , then

$$ \begin{align*} \rho\bigg(\frac{1}{n}\sum_{i=0}^{n-1}\delta_{x_i},\frac{1}{n}\sum_{i=0}^{n-1}\delta_{y_i}\bigg) \leq\varepsilon+\delta \mathrm{diam}(X), \end{align*} $$

where $\mathrm {diam}(X):=\sup _{x,y\in X}d(x,y)$ .

Proof.

$$ \begin{align*} \rho\bigg(\frac{1}{n}\sum_{i=0}^{n-1}\delta_{x_i},\frac{1}{n}\sum_{i=0}^{n-1}\delta_{y_i}\bigg) &\leq \frac{1}{n}\sum_{i=0}^{n-1}\rho(\delta_{x_i},\delta_{y_i})\\ &=\frac{1}{n}\bigg(\sum_{i\in\Lambda}\rho(\delta_{x_i},\delta_{y_i})+\sum_{i\not\in\Lambda} \rho(\delta_{x_i},\delta_{y_i})\bigg)\\ &\leq\frac{1}{n}[\varepsilon|\Lambda|+\mathrm{diam}(X)(n-|\Lambda|)]\\ &\leq\varepsilon+\delta\mathrm{diam}(X).\\[-37pt] \end{align*} $$

Lemma 2.3. Suppose $\{a_i:i\in \Lambda \}$ is a finite subset of $\{x\in \mathbb {R}:|x|\leq 1\}$ , then for every non-empty set $S\subset \Lambda $ , one has

$$ \begin{align*} \bigg|\frac{1}{|S|}\sum_{i\in S}a_i-\frac{1}{|\Lambda|}\sum_{i\in\Lambda}a_i\bigg| \leq\frac{2(|\Lambda|-|S|)}{|\Lambda|}. \end{align*} $$

Proof. Clearly,

$$ \begin{align*} \bigg|\frac{1}{|S|}\sum_{i\in S}a_i-\frac{1}{|\Lambda|}\sum_{i\in\Lambda}a_i\bigg| &=\bigg|\frac{|\Lambda|-|S|}{|\Lambda||S|}\sum_{i\in S}a_i -\frac{1}{|\Lambda|}\sum_{i\in\Lambda\setminus S}a_i\bigg|\\ &\leq\frac{|\Lambda|-|S|}{|\Lambda||S|}\sum_{i\in S}|a_i| +\frac{1}{|\Lambda|}\sum_{i\in\Lambda\setminus S}|a_i|\\ &\leq\frac{2(|\Lambda|-|S|)}{|\Lambda|}. \end{align*} $$

This completes the proof of Lemma 2.3.

2.2. Pseudo-expansive

The goal of this subsection is to show that pseudo-expansiveness is weaker than expansiveness.

Lemma 2.4. Suppose that T is a homeomorphism and $(X,T)$ is expansive with an expansive constant c, then for any $\varepsilon>0$ , there exists $N=N(\varepsilon )\in \mathbb {N}$ such that for every $x,y\in X$ with $d(T^ix,T^iy)\leq c$ for any $-N\leq i\leq N$ , we have $d(x,y)<\varepsilon $ .

Proof. Otherwise, there exists $\varepsilon _0>0$ such that for any $n\in \mathbb {N}$ , there exists $x_n,y_n\in X$ with $d(T^ix_n,T^iy_n)\leq c$ for any $-n\leq i\leq n$ and $d(x_n,y_n)\geq \varepsilon _0$ . Since X is compact, we can suppose that there exist $0<n_1<n_2<\cdots $ such that $\lim \nolimits _{j\to \infty }x_{n_j}=x$ and $\lim \nolimits _{j\to \infty }y_{n_j}=y$ , then $d(x,y)\geq \varepsilon _0$ . Fix $k\in \mathbb {Z}$ , there exists $l\in \mathbb {N}$ such that for any $j\geq l$ , we have that $n_j\geq |k|$ , and hence, $d(T^kx_{n_j},T^ky_{n_j})\leq c$ , so letting $j\to \infty $ , we have that $d(T^kx,T^ky)\leq c$ . By the expansiveness of $(X,T)$ , we have that $x=y$ , which contradicts with $d(x,y)\geq \varepsilon _0$ .

Lemma 2.5. Suppose that T is a homeomorphism and $(X,T)$ is expansive with an expansive constant c, then $(X,T)$ is pseudo-expansive with a pseudo-expansive constant c.

Proof. From the definition of pseudo-expansiveness, we only need to show that $\lim \nolimits _{i\to \infty }d(T^ix,T^iy)=0$ provided that $d(T^nx,T^ny)\leq c$ for any $n\in \mathbb {N}_0$ . For such $x,y$ , given $\varepsilon>0$ , let $N=N(\varepsilon )$ be chosen as in Lemma 2.4, then for any $n\geq N$ , we have that $d(T^i(T^nx),T^i(T^ny))\leq c$ for any $-N\leq i\leq N$ , and hence, $d(T^nx,T^ny)<\varepsilon $ . As a result, $\lim \nolimits _{i\to \infty }d(T^ix,T^iy)=0$ .

2.3. Closability and linkability

The $(n,\varepsilon )$ Bowen ball at x is denoted by

$$ \begin{align*} B_n(x,\varepsilon):=\{y\in X:d(T^ix,T^iy)<\varepsilon\text{ for } 0\leq i\leq n-1\}. \end{align*} $$

Given $K\subset \mathrm {Per}(T)$ , denote

$$ \begin{align*} \mathcal{M}_T^{\mathrm{co}}(K):=\{\delta_x^n:x\in \mathrm{Per}_n(T)\cap K, n\geq1\}. \end{align*} $$

Definition 2.6. [Reference Gelfert and Kwietniak12, Definition 4.2]

A point $x\in X$ is closable with respect to a non-empty set $K\subset \mathrm {Per}(T)$ , or simply K-closable if, for every $\varepsilon>0$ and $N>0$ , there exist ${p=p(x,\varepsilon ,N)}$ , $q=q(x,\varepsilon ,N)\in \mathbb {N}$ such that there is $y\in B_p(x,\varepsilon )\cap K$ satisfying $T^q(y)=y$ and $N\leq p\leq q\leq (1+\varepsilon )p$ .

Definition 2.7. [Reference Gelfert and Kwietniak12, Definition 4.5]

A measure $\mu \in \mathcal {M}_T(X)$ is K-closable if some generic point of $\mu $ is K-closable. A dynamical system $(X,T)$ is K-closable if every $\mu \in \mathcal {M}_T^{erg}(X)$ is K-closable.

Lemma 2.8. [Reference Gelfert and Kwietniak12, Theorem 4.11]

If $(X,T)$ is K-closable for some $K\subset \mathrm {Per}(T)$ , then $\mathcal {M}_T^{\mathrm {co}}(K)$ is dense in $\mathcal {M}_T^{\mathrm {erg}}(X)$ .

Definition 2.9. [Reference Gelfert and Kwietniak12, Definition 4.12]

A set $K\subset \mathrm {Per}(T)$ is linkable if for every $y_1,y_2\in K$ , $\varepsilon>0$ , and $\unicode{x3bb} \in [0,1]$ , there exist $p_1,p_2,q_1,q_2\in \mathbb {N}$ and $z\in K$ with $T^{q_2}z=z$ satisfying:

  1. (1) $\unicode{x3bb} -\varepsilon \leq {p_1}/({p_1+p_2})\leq \unicode{x3bb} +\varepsilon $ ;

  2. (2) $p_j\leq q_j-q_{j-1}\leq (1+\varepsilon )p_j$ and $T^{q_{j-1}}z\in B_{p_j}(y_j,\varepsilon )$ for $q_0=0$ , $j=1,2$ .

Lemma 2.10. [Reference Gelfert and Kwietniak12, Theorem 6.1]

Suppose that $(X,T)$ is a dynamical system, $K\subset \mathrm {Per}(T)$ is linkable, and $\mathcal {M}_T^{\mathrm {co}}(K)$ is dense in $\mathcal {M}_T^{\mathrm {erg}}(X)$ , then:

  1. (1) $\mathcal {M}_T^{\mathrm {co}}(K)$ is dense in $\mathcal {M}_T(X)$ ;

  2. (2) for every non-empty compact connected subset $V{\kern-1pt}\subset{\kern-1pt} \mathcal {M}_T(X)$ , $C_T(X){\kern-1pt}={\kern-1pt}\overline {G_V{\kern-1pt}\cap{\kern-1pt} C_T(X)}$ .

2.4. Metric entropy and topological entropy

2.4.1. Metric entropy

We call $(X, \mathcal {B}, \mu )$ a probability space if $\mathcal B$ is a Borel $\sigma $ -algebra on X and $\mu $ is a probability measure on X. For a finite measurable partition $\xi =\{A_1, \ldots , A_n\}$ of $(X, \mathcal {B}, \mu )$ , define

$$ \begin{align*}H_\mu(\xi)=-\sum_{i=1}^n\mu(A_i)\log\mu(A_i). \end{align*} $$

Let $T:X\to X$ be a continuous map preserving $\mu $ . We denote by $\bigvee _{i=0}^{n-1}T^{-i}\xi $ the partition whose elements are the sets $\bigcap _{i=0}^{n-1}T^{-i}A_{j_i}, 1\leq j_i\leq n$ . Then the following limit exists:

$$ \begin{align*} h_\mu(T, \xi)=\lim_{n\to\infty}\frac1n H_\mu\bigg(\bigvee_{i=0}^{n-1}T^{-i}\xi\bigg) \end{align*} $$

and we define the metric entropy of $\mu $ as

$$ \begin{align*} h_\mu(T):=\sup\{h_\mu(T, \xi):\xi \text{ is a finite measurable partition of } X\}. \end{align*} $$

2.4.2. Topological entropy

Given $n\in \mathbb {N}$ and $\varepsilon>0$ , a subset $E\subset X$ is said to be $(n,\varepsilon )$ -separated if for any two distinct points $x,y\in E$ , there exists $0\leq k\leq n-1$ such that $d(T^kx,T^ky)>\varepsilon $ . The largest cardinality of an $(n,\varepsilon )$ -separated subset of X is denoted by $s(n,\varepsilon )$ , then the topological entropy of $(X,T)$ is defined as

$$ \begin{align*}h_{\mathrm{top}}(T):=\lim_{\varepsilon\to0}\limsup_{n\to\infty}\frac{1}{n}\log s(n,\varepsilon).\end{align*} $$

2.5. Symbolic dynamics

Let A be a finite alphabet, $A^{\mathbb {N}_0}:=\{x_0x_1\cdots :x_i\in A,i\in \mathbb {N}_0\}$ , the one-side full shift over A is $(A^{\mathbb {N}_0},T)$ , where $T(x_0x_1x_2\ldots )=x_1x_2\ldots $ for any $x_0x_1x_2\ldots \in A^{\mathbb {N}_0}$ .

2.5.1. Words

A member w of $A^{\{i,i+1,\ldots ,j\}}$ for some $0\leq i\leq j$ is called a word over A and its length $j-i+1$ is denoted by $|w|$ . Let $A^\ast :=\bigcup _{0\leq i\leq j}A^{\{i,i+1,\ldots ,j\}}$ denote the set of all words over A. For $n\in \mathbb {N}$ , denote $A^n:=A^{\{0,\ldots ,n-1\}}$ . Given a subset $\mathcal {F}\subset A^\ast $ , we can define the set $X=X(\mathcal {F}):=\{x\in A^{\mathbb {N}_0}:x_ix_{i+1}\cdots x_j\notin \mathcal {F}\text { for any }0\leq i\leq j\}$ , and it is well known that X is a subshift of $A^{\mathbb {N}_0}$ and $\mathcal {F}$ is called the forbidden words of X. Given $w\in A^\ast $ and $n\in \mathbb {N}_{0}\cup \{\infty \}$ , we define $w^n:=\underbrace {ww\cdots w}_{n\,\text {items}}$ .

2.5.2. Language

The language of a subshift X, denoted by $\mathcal {L}(X)$ , is the set of all words which appear in points of X. For any $n\in \mathbb {N}$ , denote $\mathcal {L}_n(X):=\mathcal {L}(X)\cap A^n$ .

2.5.3. Cylinder sets

Given a subshift X and a word $w\in \mathcal {L}_n(X)$ , the cylinder set $[w]$ is the set of all $x\in X$ with $x_0x_1\cdots x_{n-1}=w$ .

2.5.4. Topological entropy

The topological entropy of a subshift X can be calculated by using the language of X,

$$ \begin{align*} h_{\mathrm{top}}(T)=\lim_{n\to\infty}\frac{1}{n}\log|\mathcal{L}_n(X)|. \end{align*} $$

2.6. Gap functions

In this subsection, we study the gap function $M(n,\varepsilon )$ appearing in the definition of non-uniform specification property.

Lemma 2.11. If $|X|\geq 2$ and $(X,T)$ satisfies the non-uniform specification property with $M(n,\varepsilon )$ , then

$$ \begin{align*} \lim_{\varepsilon\rightarrow0}M(1,\varepsilon)=\infty. \end{align*} $$

Proof. Recall that $M(1,\varepsilon )$ is non-increasing with $\varepsilon $ , suppose for a contradiction that $\lim \nolimits _{\varepsilon \rightarrow 0}M(1,\varepsilon )<\infty $ . Choose a positive integer N sufficiently large such that ${M(1,\varepsilon )\leq N}$ for all $0<\varepsilon <1$ .

Fix $x,y\in X$ such that $T^Nx\neq y$ . Let $\delta =\tfrac 13 d(T^Nx,y)$ . Since X is compact, there exists $0<\varepsilon <\delta $ such that

$$ \begin{align*} d(T^Nw_1,T^Nw_2)<\delta \end{align*} $$

whenever $d(w_1,w_2)<2\varepsilon $ . By the non-uniform specification property, there exists a $z\in X$ such that

$$ \begin{align*} d(x,z)\leq\varepsilon\quad\text{and}\quad d(y,T^Nz)\leq\varepsilon, \end{align*} $$

and thus

$$ \begin{align*} d(T^Nx,T^Nz)<\delta\quad\text{and}\quad d(y,T^Nz)<\delta. \end{align*} $$

This implies

$$ \begin{align*} \delta=\tfrac13 d(T^Nx,y)\leq\tfrac13(d(T^Nx,T^Nz)+d(T^Nz,y))<\tfrac23\delta, \end{align*} $$

which is a contradiction. This completes the proof of Lemma 2.11.

Lemma 2.12. Let $M(n,\varepsilon ):\mathbb {N}\times (0,\infty )\rightarrow \mathbb {N}$ be a function such that $M(n,\varepsilon )$ is non-decreasing with n and non-increasing with $\varepsilon $ . Suppose

$$ \begin{align*} \lim_{\varepsilon\rightarrow0}M(1,\varepsilon)=\infty \end{align*} $$

and

$$ \begin{align*} \sup_{\varepsilon>0}\liminf_{n\rightarrow\infty}\frac{M(n,\varepsilon)}{n}>0. \end{align*} $$

Then there exists a non-increasing sequence of positive real numbers $\{\varepsilon _k\}_{k\geq 1}$ with $\varepsilon _k\rightarrow 0$ such that

$$ \begin{align*} \inf_{n\geq1}\min_{1\leq k\leq n}\frac{M(n-k+1,\varepsilon_k)-k-1}{n+1}>0. \end{align*} $$

Proof. Since $\lim \nolimits _{\varepsilon \rightarrow 0}M(1,\varepsilon )=\infty $ , we can define

$$ \begin{align*} \varepsilon_n=\min\{\varepsilon_0,\sup\{\varepsilon:M(1,\varepsilon)>(n+1)^4\}\}, \end{align*} $$

where $0<\varepsilon _0<1$ is a positive number such that

$$ \begin{align*} \liminf_{n\rightarrow\infty}\frac{M(n,2\varepsilon_0)}{n+1}>0. \end{align*} $$

Clearly $\varepsilon _n$ is non-increasing and $\varepsilon _n\rightarrow 0$ . We claim that

$$ \begin{align*} \inf_{n\geq1}\min_{1\leq k\leq n}\frac{M(n-k+1,\varepsilon_k)-k-1}{n+1}>0. \end{align*} $$

Let $s=\inf \nolimits _{n\geq 1} ({M(n,2\varepsilon _0)}/({n+1}))$ . It is easy to check that $s>0$ . Since $M(n,\varepsilon )$ is non-increasing with $\varepsilon $ , we obtain that

$$ \begin{align*} \inf_{n\geq1}\frac{M(n,\varepsilon_k)}{n+1}\geq s \end{align*} $$

for all $k\in \mathbb {N}$ . Choose a positive integer $N> {4}/{s^2}$ . Then for $n\geq 4N$ and $1\leq k\leq \sqrt {n}-1\leq \lfloor \sqrt {n}\rfloor $ , one has

$$ \begin{align*} \frac{M(n-k+1,\varepsilon_k)-k-1}{n+1} &\geq\frac{M(n-k+1,\varepsilon_1)-\sqrt{n}}{n+1}\\ &\geq\frac{n-\lfloor\sqrt{n}\rfloor+2}{n+1} \frac{M(n-\lfloor\sqrt{n}\rfloor+1,\varepsilon_1)}{n-\lfloor\sqrt{n}\rfloor+2} -\frac{1}{\sqrt{n}}\\ &\geq\frac{1}{2}s-\frac{s}{4}=\frac{s}{4}>0, \end{align*} $$

and for $n\geq 4N\geq 4$ and $\sqrt {n}-1<k\leq n$ , one has

$$ \begin{align*} \frac{M(n-k+1,\varepsilon_k)-k-1}{n+1}\geq\frac{M(1,\varepsilon_k)-k-1}{n+1} \geq\frac{(k+1)^4}{n+1}-1\geq \frac{n^2}{n+1}-1\geq1. \end{align*} $$

This implies

$$ \begin{align*} \inf_{n\geq1}\min_{1\leq k\leq n}\frac{M(n-k+1,\varepsilon_k)-k-1}{n+1}\geq c, \end{align*} $$

where

$$ \begin{align*} c=\min\bigg\{1,\frac{s}{4}, \min_{1\leq k\leq n\leq 4N}\bigg\{\frac{M(n-k+1,\varepsilon_k)-k-1}{n+1}\bigg\}\bigg\}. \end{align*} $$

By the definition of $\varepsilon _k$ , we obtain that $M(n,\varepsilon _k)>k+1$ for all $n\in \mathbb {N}$ and thus $c>0$ . This completes the proof of Lemma 2.12.

2.7. DC2 chaos and Devaney chaos

2.7.1. DC2 chaos

Definition 2.13. A pair $x,y\in X$ is said to be $DC2$ -scrambled if the following two conditions hold:

$$ \begin{align*} \text{for all } t>0,\quad \limsup_{n\to \infty}\frac{1}{n}|\{0\leq i\leq n-1:\ d(f^i(x),f^i(y))<t\}|=1; \end{align*} $$
$$ \begin{align*} \text{there exists } t_0>0,\quad \liminf_{n\to \infty}\frac{1}{n}|\{0\leq i\leq n-1:\ d(f^i(x),f^i(y))<t_0\}|<1. \end{align*} $$

A set S is called a DC2-scrambled set if any pair of its distinct points is DC2-scrambled. Additionally, $(X,T)$ is said to be DC2 chaotic if it has an uncountable DC2-scrambled set.

Lemma 2.14. [Reference Downarowicz10, Theorem 1.1]

Suppose that $(X,T)$ is a dynamical system with $h_{\mathrm {top}}(T)>0$ , then $(X,T)$ is DC2 chaotic.

2.7.2. Devaney chaos

Definition 2.15. $(X,T)$ is said to be Devaney chaotic, if it satisfies the following conditions:

  1. (1) $(X,T)$ is topological transitive;

  2. (2) $\overline {\mathrm {Per}(T)}=X$ ;

  3. (3) $(X,T)$ has sensitive dependence on initial conditions, that is, there exists $\varepsilon>0$ such that for any $\delta>0$ and $x\in X$ , there exists $y\in X$ and $n\in \mathbb {N}$ such that $d(x,y)<\delta $ and $d(T^nx,T^ny)>\varepsilon $ .

It was shown by Banks et al [Reference Banks, Brooks, Cairns, Davis and Stacey2] that condition (3) can be deduced from conditions (1) and (2), provided that $|X|=\infty $ .

2.8. Irregular sets

Lemma 2.16. Suppose that $(X,T)$ is a dynamical system with $\mathcal {C}(T)\neq \emptyset $ , then

$$ \begin{align*}G^{\overline{\mathcal{M}_T^{\mathrm{erg}}(X)}}\subset\bigcap_{f\in\mathcal{C}(T)}I_f(T).\end{align*} $$

Proof. Fix $f\in C(X)$ with $I_f(T)\neq \emptyset $ , then there exist $\mu _1,\mu _2\in V_T(x)$ with $\int _{X}f\,{d}\mu _1<\int _{X}f\,{d}\mu _2$ and, by ergodic decomposition theorem, there exist $\nu _1,\nu _2\in \mathcal {M}_T^{\mathrm {erg}} (X)$ with $\int _{X}f\,{d}\nu _1<\int _{X}f\,{d}\nu _2$ . Hence, $G^{\overline {\mathcal {M}_T^{\mathrm {erg}}(X)}}\subset I_f(T)$ . As a result, $G^{\overline {\mathcal {M}_T^{\mathrm {erg}}(X)}}\subset \bigcap _{f\in \mathcal {C}(T)} I_f(T)$ .

2.9. Some basic properties of ergodic measures

Lemma 2.17. [Reference Denker, Grillenberger and Sigmund8, Proposition 5.7]

Suppose that $(X,T)$ is a dynamical system, then $\mathcal {M}_T^{\mathrm {erg}}(X)$ is a $G_\delta $ subset of $\mathcal {M}_T(X)$ .

Lemma 2.18. [Reference Shinoda28, p. 2192]

Suppose that $\mathcal {M}_T^{\mathrm {erg}}(X)$ is dense in $\mathcal {M}_T(X)$ , then $\mathcal {M}_T^{\mathrm {erg}}(X)$ is connected.

2.10. Approximate product property and entropy-dense property

After the large deviation estimates were obtained Eizenberg et al [Reference Eizenberg, Kifer and Weiss11], the approximate product property, a weaker form of specification property, was first introduced by Pfister and Sullivan [Reference Pfister and Sullivan25] to obtain similar results for more general dynamical systems, such as the $\beta $ -shifts. In some sense, it is weaker than the non-uniform specification property (Lemma 3.5).

Definition 2.19. $(X,T)$ is said to satisfy the approximate product property if for any $\varepsilon>0$ , $\delta _1>0$ , and $\delta _2>0$ , there exists $N=N(\varepsilon ,\delta _1,\delta _2)\in \mathbb {N}$ such that for any $n\geq N$ and any sequence $\{x_i\}_{i=1}^{+\infty }$ of X, there exist a sequence of integers $\{h_i\}_{i=1}^{+\infty }$ and $x\in X$ satisfying $h_1=0$ , $n\leq h_{i+1}-h_i\leq n(1+\delta _2)$ , and

$$ \begin{align*}|\{0\leq j\leq n-1: d(T^{h_i+j}x,T^jx_i)>\varepsilon\}|\leq\delta_1n.\end{align*} $$

Definition 2.20. $(X,T)$ is said to satisfy the entropy-dense property if for any ${\mu \in \mathcal {M}_T(X)}$ , any $\eta <h_\mu (T)$ , and any $\varepsilon>0$ , there exists $\nu \in \mathcal {M}_T^{\mathrm {erg}}(X)$ such that $\rho (\mu ,\nu )<\varepsilon $ and $h_\nu (T)>\eta $ .

Lemma 2.21. [Reference Pfister and Sullivan25, Theorem 2.1]

Suppose that $(X,T)$ is a dynamical system satisfying the approximate product property, then it is entropy-dense.

Lemma 2.22. Suppose that $(X,T)$ is a dynamical system satisfying the approximate product property, then it satisfies properties (R3), (R4), and (R5).

Proof. By Lemma 2.21, it is entropy-dense. From the definition of entropy-dense property, $\mathcal {M}_T^{\mathrm {erg}}(X)$ is dense in $\mathcal {M}_T(X)$ , and hence by Lemma 2.18, $\mathcal {M}_T^{\mathrm {erg}}(X)$ is connected. Additionally, by Lemma 2.17, $\mathcal {M}_T^{\mathrm {erg}}(X)$ is residual in $\mathcal {M}_T(X)$ .

3. Non-uniform specification property

Given $\mu \in \mathcal {M}(X)$ and $\varepsilon>0$ , denote

$$ \begin{align*}B(\mu,\varepsilon):=\{\nu\in\mathcal{M}(X):\rho(\mu,\nu)<\varepsilon\}.\end{align*} $$

Lemma 3.1. [Reference Hou, Lin and Tian14, Theorem 2.1]

Suppose that $(X,T)$ is a topological dynamical system, given $K\subset \mathcal {M}_T(X)$ . If $\{x\in X:V_T(x)\cap B(\mu ,\varepsilon )\neq \emptyset \}$ is dense in X for any $\varepsilon>0$ and any $\mu \in K$ , then $G^{\overline {K}}$ is residual in X.

Theorem 3.2. Suppose that $(X,T)$ satisfies the non-uniform periodic specification property with $M(n,\varepsilon )$ , then we have the following:

  1. (1) $\overline {\mathrm {Per}(T)}=X$ and $C_T(X)=X$ ;

  2. (2) $(X,T)$ is topologically mixing;

  3. (3) if $(X,T)$ is pseudo-expansive, then

    $$ \begin{align*} h_{\mathrm{top}}(T)\geq\limsup_{n\to\infty}\frac{1}{n}\log|\mathrm{Per}_{n}(T)|; \end{align*} $$
  4. (4) for every compact subset $K\subset \mathcal {M}_T(X)$ with $G^K\neq \emptyset $ , we have $G^K$ is residual in X. If further, $(X,T)$ is pseudo-expansive, then for every non-empty compact connected subset $K\subset \mathcal {M}_T(X)$ with $G_K\neq \emptyset $ , $G_K$ is dense in X.

    If further, $|X|\geq 2$ , then

  5. (5) $h_{\mathrm {top}}(T)>0$ and for any $\delta>0$ ,

    $$ \begin{align*} \limsup_{n\to\infty}\frac{1}{n}\log| \mathrm{Per}_{n}(T)|\geq\limsup_{n\to\infty}\frac{1}{n}\log|\mathrm{Per}_{n,\delta}(T)|>0; \end{align*} $$
  6. (6) $(X,T)$ is DC2 chaotic;

  7. (7) $(X,T)$ is Devaney chaotic;

  8. (8) $\mathcal {C}(T)\neq \emptyset $ and $\bigcap _{f\in \mathcal {C}(T)}I_f(T)$ is residual in X.

Proof. (1) From the definition, we have $\overline {\mathrm {Per}(T)}=X$ and thus by [Reference Denker, Grillenberger and Sigmund8, Proposition 21.12], $C_T(X)=X$ .

(2) When $\sup _{\varepsilon>0}\lim \nolimits _{n\to \infty } ({M(n,\varepsilon )}/{n})=0$ , the result is directly from [Reference Kwietniak, Ła̧cka, Oprocha, Kolyada, Möller, Moree and Ward16, Theorem 17(4)]. In fact, their proof still works without the assumption that $\sup _{\varepsilon>0}\lim \nolimits _{n\to \infty } ({M(n,\varepsilon )}/{n})=0$ , and we put it here. Given a pair of non-empty open subsets U and V of X, there exist $x{\kern-1pt}\in{\kern-1pt} U$ , $y{\kern-1pt}\in{\kern-1pt} V$ , and $\varepsilon{\kern-1pt}>{\kern-1pt}0$ such that $B(x,2\varepsilon ){\kern-1pt}\subset{\kern-1pt} U$ and $B(y,2\varepsilon )\subset V$ . Let $N=M(1,\varepsilon )$ , then for every $n\geq N$ , there exists $z\in X$ such that $d(x,z)\leq \varepsilon $ and $d(y,T^nz)\leq \varepsilon $ . Hence, $f^n(U)\cap V\neq \emptyset $ . As a result, $(X,T)$ is topologically mixing.

(3) Suppose that c is a pseudo-expansive constant for $(X,T)$ , then $\mathrm {Per}_n(T)$ is $(n,c)$ -separated, and hence $h_{\mathrm {top}}(T)\geq \limsup \nolimits _{n\to \infty } ({1}/{n}) \log s(n,c)\geq \limsup \nolimits _{n\to \infty }({1}/{n})\log |\mathrm {Per}_{n}(T)|.$

(4) (i) Since $G^K\neq \emptyset $ , we can choose $y\in G^K$ . Given $\varepsilon>0$ and $\mu \in K$ , by Lemma 3.1, to show that $G^K$ is residual in X, it is enough to show that $\{x{\kern-1pt}\in{\kern-1pt} X{\kern-1pt}:{\kern-1pt}V_T(x){\kern-1pt}\cap{\kern-1pt} B(\mu ,\varepsilon ){\kern-1pt}\neq{\kern-1pt} \emptyset \}$ is dense in X. Given $x\in X$ and $0<\delta < {\varepsilon }/{2}$ , let $N=M(1,\delta )$ . For any $n\in \mathbb {N}$ , by non-uniform periodic specification property, we can find $z_n\in X$ such that $d(x,z_n)\leq \delta $ and $d(T^iy,T^{N+i}z_n)\leq \delta $ for any $0\leq i\leq n-1$ . Since X is compact, we can choose an accumulation point z of $\{z_n:n\geq 1\}$ . Then $d(x,z)\leq \delta $ and $d(T^iy,T^{N+i}z)\leq \delta $ for any $i\geq 0$ . Hence, $\rho (\delta _{T^Nz}^n,\delta _y^n)\leq \delta $ for any $n\geq 1$ . As a result, $V_T(T^Nz)\cap B(\mu ,\varepsilon )\neq \emptyset $ and thus $V_T(z)\cap B(\mu ,\varepsilon )\neq \emptyset $ . Therefore, $\{x\in X:V_T(x)\cap B(\mu ,\varepsilon )\neq \emptyset \}$ is dense in X.

(ii) When $(X,T)$ is pseudo-expansive, let c be a pseudo-expansive constant. Since $G_K\neq \emptyset $ , we can choose $y\in G_K$ . Given $x\in X$ and $0<\delta \leq c$ , let $N=M(1,\delta )$ . Following the same line in part (i), we can find $z\in X$ such that $d(z,x)\leq \delta $ and $d(T^iy,T^{N+i}z)\leq \delta $ for any $i\geq 0$ . By the pseudo-expansiveness of $(X,T)$ , $\lim \nolimits _{n\to \infty }d(T^{N+n}z,T^ny)=0$ , since $y\in G_K$ , we have $T^Nz\in G_K$ . Hence, $z\in G_K$ . As a result, $G_K$ is dense in X.

(5) (i) Since $|X|\geq 2$ , we can choose $\varepsilon>0$ and $x,y\in X$ with $d(x,y)>3\varepsilon $ . Given $n\in \mathbb {N}$ and an n-tuple $(z_0,z_1,\ldots ,z_{n-1})\in \{x,y\}^n$ , let $N=M(1,\varepsilon )$ . Then there exists $z\in X$ with $d(z_i,T^{iN}z)\leq \varepsilon $ for any $0\leq i\leq n-1$ . Hence, for every two different n-tuples, the points we find are $(nN,\varepsilon )$ -separated. As a result, $s(nN,\varepsilon )\geq 2^n$ . Therefore,

$$ \begin{align*} h_{\mathrm{top}}(T)\geq\limsup_{n\to\infty}\frac{1}{nN}\log s(nN,\varepsilon)\geq\lim_{n\to\infty}\frac{1}{nN}\cdot n\log2>0.\end{align*} $$

(ii) Given $\delta>0$ , by item (2), $(X,T)$ is topologically mixing. Choose a transitive point $z_\ast \in X$ and $N_0\in \mathbb {N}$ with

$$ \begin{align*}d_H(\{z_\ast,Tz_\ast,\ldots,T^{N_0-1}z_\ast\},X)<\frac{\delta}{2}.\end{align*} $$

Since $|X|\geq 2$ , we can choose $0<\varepsilon < {\delta }/{2}$ and $x,y\in X$ with $d(x,y)>3\varepsilon $ . Let ${N_1=M(1,\varepsilon )}$ and $N_2=M(N_0,\varepsilon )$ , then given $n\in \mathbb {N}$ and a $(n+1)$ -tuple $(z_0,z_1,\ldots , z_{n-1},z_\ast )$ , there exists $z\in X$ with $d(z_i,T^{iN_1}z)\leq \varepsilon $ for any $0\leq i\leq n-1$ , $d(T^jz_\ast , T^{nN_1+j}z) \leq \varepsilon $ for any $0\leq j\leq N_0-1$ and $T^{m_n}z=z$ , where $m_n=nN_1+N_0-1+N_2$ . Hence, $z\in \mathrm {Per}_{m_n,\delta }(T)$ . Since for every two different $(n+1)$ -tuples, the points we find are different, we have $|\mathrm {Per}_{m_n,\delta }(T)|\geq ({1}/{m_n}) 2^n$ . As a result,

$$ \begin{align*} \limsup_{n\to\infty}\frac{1}{n}\log|\mathrm{Per}_{n,\delta}(T)|&\geq\limsup_{n\to\infty} \frac{1}{m_n}\log|\mathrm{Per}_{m_n,\delta}(T)|\\ &\geq\limsup_{n\to\infty} \bigg(\frac{n}{m_n}\log2-\frac{1}{m_n}\log m_n\bigg)>0. \end{align*} $$

(6) By item (5), $h_{\mathrm {top}}(T)>0$ and thus by Lemma 2.14, $(X,T)$ is DC2 chaotic.

(7) Since $h_{\mathrm {top}}(T)>0$ , we have that $|X|=\infty $ . By item (2), $(X,T)$ is topological mixing and thus topological transitive. Combining with item (1), we have that $(X,T)$ is Devaney chaotic.

(8) By item (1), $\overline {\mathrm {Per}(T)}=X$ , and combining with $|X|=\infty $ , we have that ${|\mathcal {M}_T^{\mathrm {erg}}(X)|\geq 2}$ . Since $\overline {\mathcal {M}_T^{\mathrm {erg}}(X)}$ is compact, we can choose a countable subset $D=\{\mu _1,\mu _2,\ldots ,\}\subset \mathcal {M}_T^{\mathrm {erg}}(X)$ with $\overline {D}=\overline {\mathcal {M}_T^{erg}(X)}$ . By Theorem 3.2(4), $G^{\mu _i}$ is residual in X for any $i\geq 1$ , and hence, $G^{D}$ is residual in X. Since $V_T(x)$ is compact for any $x\in X$ , we have that

$$ \begin{align*}G^{\overline{\mathcal{M}_T^{\mathrm{erg}}(X)}}=G^{\overline{D}}=G^D.\end{align*} $$

As a result, $G^{\overline {\mathcal {M}_T^{\mathrm {erg}}(X)}}$ is residual in X. Since $|\mathcal {M}_T^{\mathrm {erg}}(X)|\geq 2$ , we can choose $f\in C(X)$ and $\nu _1,\nu _2\in \mathcal {M}_T^{\mathrm {erg}}(X)$ with $\int _Xf\,{d}\nu _1<\int _Xf\,{d}\nu _2$ , and hence, $\emptyset \neq G^{\overline {\mathcal {M}_T^{\mathrm {erg}}(X)}}\subset I_f(T)$ and thus $\mathcal {C}(T)\neq \emptyset $ . By Lemma 2.16, $\bigcap _{f\in \mathcal {C}(T)}I_f(T)$ is residual in X.

From the proof of Theorem 3.2, for dynamical system $(X,T)$ satisfying the non-uniform specification property with $M(n,\varepsilon )$ , Theorem 3.2(2) and Theorem 3.2(4) still hold. If further $|X|\geq 2$ , then $h_{\mathrm {top}}(T)>0$ ; Theorems 3.2(6) and 3.2(8) still hold.

Lemma 3.3. Suppose $(X,T)$ satisfies the non-uniform periodic specification property with $M(n,\varepsilon )$ , where

$$ \begin{align*} \sup_{\varepsilon>0}\liminf_{n\rightarrow\infty}\frac{M(n,\varepsilon)}{n}=0. \end{align*} $$

Then $(X,T)$ is $\mathrm {Per}(T)$ -closable and $\mathrm {Per}(T)$ is linkable.

Proof. (1) First, we show that $(X,T)$ is $\mathrm {Per}(T)$ -closable. Fix $\mu \in \mathcal {M}_T^{\mathrm {erg}}(X)$ , $x\in G_\mu $ , ${\varepsilon>0}$ , and $N>0$ . Choose $p\geq N$ large enough such that

(3.2) $$ \begin{align} \frac{M(p, {\varepsilon}/{2})}{p}<\frac{\varepsilon}{2}\quad\text{and}\quad \frac{M(1,{\varepsilon}/{2})}{p}<\frac{\varepsilon}{2}. \end{align} $$

Let $x_1=x_2=x$ , $a_1=0$ , $b_1=p-1$ , $b_2=a_2=M(p,{\varepsilon }/{2})+p-1$ , and $q=M(p, {\varepsilon }/{2}) +p-1+M(1, {\varepsilon }/{2})$ , then by the non-uniform periodic specification property, there exists $y\in \mathrm {Per}_q(T)$ such that $y\in B_p(x,\varepsilon )$ . From equation (3.2), we have $q\leq (1+\varepsilon )p$ . Therefore, x is $\mathrm {Per}(T)$ -closable. From the definition, we have that $(X,T)$ is $\mathrm {Per}(T)$ -closable.

(2) Now, we show that $\mathrm {Per}(T)$ is linkable. Fix $y_1,y_2\in \mathrm {Per}(T)$ and $\unicode{x3bb} \in [0,1]$ .

(i) $\unicode{x3bb} =0$ , fix $\varepsilon>0$ , choose $p_1\in \mathbb {N}$ with ${M(p_1, {\varepsilon }/{2})}/{p_1}<\varepsilon $ , and choose $p_2$ large enough such that ${M(p_2,{\varepsilon }/{2})}/{p_2} < \varepsilon $ and ${p_1}/({p_1+p_2})\leq \varepsilon $ . Let $x_1=y_1,x_2=y_2, a_1\ =\ 0,\ b_1\ =\ p_1\ -\ 1,\ q_1\ =\ p_1 - 1\ +\ M(p_1,\ {\varepsilon }/{2}),\ a_2\ =\ q_1,\ b_2\ =\ q_1\ +\ p_2\ -\ 1, q_2 = q_1 + p_2-1 + M(p_2, {\varepsilon }/{2})$ , then $p_j\leq q_j-q_{j-1}\leq (1+\varepsilon )p_j$ and by the non-uniform periodic specification property, there exists $z\in \mathrm {Per}_{q_2}(T)$ such that $T^{q_{j-1}}z\in B_{p_j}(y_j,\varepsilon )$ for $q_0=0$ , $j=1,2$ .

(ii) $\unicode{x3bb} =1$ , fix $\varepsilon>0$ , choose $p_2\in \mathbb {N}$ with $({M(p_2,{\varepsilon }/{2})}/{p_2})<\varepsilon $ , and choose $p_1$ large enough such that $({M(p_1,{\varepsilon }/{2})}/{p_1})<\varepsilon $ and $1-\varepsilon \leq {p_1}/({p_1+p_2})$ . Let $x_1=y_1, x_2 = y_2, a_1\ =\ 0,\ b_1\ =\ p_1\ -\ 1,\ q_1\ =\ p_1 - 1\ +\ M(p_1,\ {\varepsilon }/{2}),\ a_2\ =\ q_1,\ b_2\ =\ q_1\ +\ p_2\ -\ 1,$ $q_2=q_1 + p_2-1+M(p_2, {\varepsilon }/{2})$ , then $p_j\leq q_j-q_{j-1}\leq (1+\varepsilon )p_j$ and by the non-uniform periodic specification property, there exists $z\in \mathrm {Per}_{q_2}(T)$ such that $T^{q_{j-1}}z\in B_{p_j}(y_j,\varepsilon )$ for $q_0=0$ , $j=1,2$ .

(iii) $0<\unicode{x3bb} <1$ , fix $0<\varepsilon <\min \{\unicode{x3bb} ,1-\unicode{x3bb} \}$ and choose $q\in \mathbb {N}$ with

(3.3) $$ \begin{align} \frac{1}{q}\leq\min \bigg\{\frac{1}{\unicode{x3bb}+\varepsilon}-1,\frac{1}{2({1}/({\unicode{x3bb}+\varepsilon})-1)}\bigg\}. \end{align} $$

Choose $p\in \mathbb {N}$ large enough such that

$$ \begin{align*} \bigg(\frac{1}{\unicode{x3bb}+\varepsilon}-1\bigg)\bigg\lceil\frac{p}{q}\bigg\rceil+1\leq \bigg(\frac{1}{\unicode{x3bb}-\varepsilon}-1\bigg)\bigg\lceil\frac{p}{q}\bigg\rceil, \end{align*} $$
$$ \begin{align*} \bigg(\frac{1}{\unicode{x3bb}+\varepsilon}-1\bigg)\frac{p}{q}+\frac{1}{\unicode{x3bb}+\varepsilon}\leq p\quad\text{and}\quad\frac{M(p,{\varepsilon}/{2})}{p}<\frac{\varepsilon}{q^2}. \end{align*} $$

Let $p_1=\lceil {p}/{q}\rceil \leq p$ , then ${M(p_1,{\varepsilon }/{2})}/{p_1}<\varepsilon $ . Let $p_2=\lceil ({1}/({\unicode{x3bb} +\varepsilon })-1)\lceil {p}/{q}\rceil \rceil $ , then $p_2\geq ({1}/({\unicode{x3bb} +\varepsilon })-1)({p}/{q})\geq {p}/{q^2}$ and

$$ \begin{align*} p_2\leq \bigg(\frac{1}{\unicode{x3bb}+\varepsilon}-1\bigg) \bigg\lceil\frac{p}{q}\bigg\rceil+1\leq \bigg(\frac{1}{\unicode{x3bb}+\varepsilon}-1\bigg)\bigg(\frac{p}{q}+1\bigg)+1\leq p. \end{align*} $$

Hence, ${M(p_2,{\varepsilon }/{2})}/{p_2}<\varepsilon $ . Since

$$ \begin{align*} \frac{1}{\unicode{x3bb}+\varepsilon}-1\leq \frac{p_2}{p_1}\leq\frac{1}{p_1}\bigg[\bigg(\frac{1}{\unicode{x3bb}+\varepsilon}-1\bigg) p_1+1\bigg]\leq\frac{1}{\unicode{x3bb}-\varepsilon}-1, \end{align*} $$

we have $\unicode{x3bb} -\varepsilon \leq {p_1}/({p_1+p_2}) \leq \unicode{x3bb} +\varepsilon $ . Let $x_1=y_1,x_2=y_2,a_1=0,b_1=p_1-1, q_1=p_1-1+M(p_1,{\varepsilon }/{2}),a_2=q_1,b_2= q_1+ p_2-1,q_2\kern1.8pt{=}\kern1.8pt q_1\kern1.7pt{+}\kern1.7pt p_2\kern1.8pt{-}\kern1.8pt 1+ M(p_2,{\varepsilon }/{2})$ , then $p_j\leq q_j-q_{j-1}\leq (1+\varepsilon )p_j$ and by the non-uniform periodic specification property, there exists $z\in \mathrm {Per}_{q_2}(T)$ such that $T^{q_{j-1}}z\in B_{p_j}(y_j,\varepsilon )$ for $q_0=0$ , $j=1,2$ .

Combining parts (i), (ii), and (iii), we have that $\mathrm {Per}(T)$ is linkable.

Theorem 3.4. Suppose $(X,T)$ satisfies the non-uniform periodic specification property with $M(n,\varepsilon )$ , where

$$ \begin{align*} \sup_{\varepsilon>0}\liminf_{n\rightarrow\infty}\frac{M(n,\varepsilon)}{n}=0, \end{align*} $$

then:

  1. (1) $\mathcal {M}_T^{\mathrm {co}}(X)$ is dense in $\mathcal {M}_T(X)$ ;

  2. (2) for any non-empty compact connected subset $V\subset \mathcal {M}_T(X)$ , $G_V$ is dense in X.

Proof. By Lemma 3.3, $(X,T)$ is $\mathrm {Per}(T)$ -closable and $\mathrm {Per}(T)$ is linkable. By Lemma 2.8, $\mathcal {M}_T^{\mathrm {co}}(X)$ is dense in $\mathcal {M}_T^{\mathrm {erg}}(X)$ . Since $C_T(X)=X$ , by Lemma 2.10, we have:

  1. (1) $\mathcal {M}_T^{\mathrm {co}}(X)$ is dense in $\mathcal {M}_T(X)$ ;

  2. (2) for any non-empty compact connected subset $V\subset \mathcal {M}_T(X)$ , $G_V$ is dense in X.

Lemma 3.5. Suppose $(X,T)$ satisfies the non-uniform specification property with $M(n,\varepsilon )$ , where

$$ \begin{align*} \sup_{\varepsilon>0}\liminf_{n\rightarrow\infty}\frac{M(n,\varepsilon)}{n}=0, \end{align*} $$

then $(X,T)$ satisfies the approximate product property.

Proof. When $\sup _{\varepsilon>0}\lim \nolimits _{n\to \infty }({M(n,\varepsilon )}/{n})=0$ , the result is directly from [Reference Kwietniak, Ła̧cka, Oprocha, Kolyada, Möller, Moree and Ward16, Remark 29]. In fact, when we only assume that $\sup _{\varepsilon>0}\liminf \nolimits _{n\to \infty } ({M(n,\varepsilon )}/{n})=0$ , the result still holds. Here is the proof.

Fix $\varepsilon>0$ , $\delta _1>0$ , and $\delta _2>0$ . Since $\liminf \nolimits _{n\rightarrow \infty } ({M(n,\varepsilon )}/{n})=0$ , we can choose $L_1$ large enough such that

$$ \begin{align*} \frac{M(L_1,\varepsilon)-1}{L_1+M(L_1,\varepsilon)-1}\leq\delta_1. \end{align*} $$

Let $L_2=L_1+M(L_1,\varepsilon )-1$ and $L_3=\max _{1\leq i\leq L_2}M(i,\varepsilon )=M(L_2,\varepsilon )$ . Choose ${N=N(\varepsilon ,\delta _1,\delta _2)}$ large enough such that ${L_3}/{N}\leq \delta _2$ . Now, we fix $n\geq N$ and a sequence $\{x_i\}_{i=1}^\infty $ . Suppose that $n-1=kL_2+p$ , where $0\leq p\leq L_2-1$ . For $i\in \mathbb {N}$ and ${0\leq j\leq k}$ , denote $y_{i,j}=T^{jL_2}x_i$ . Then for any $m\in \mathbb {N}$ , consider the orbit segments:

$$ \begin{align*} \langle y_{1,0}, Ty_{1,0}, &\ldots,T^{L_1-1}y_{1,0}\rangle, \langle y_{1,1}, Ty_{1,1}, \ldots,T^{L_1-1}y_{1,1}\rangle,\ldots,\\ &\langle y_{1,k-1},Ty_{1,k-1},\ldots, T^{L_1-1}y_{1,k-1}\rangle, \langle y_{1,k},Ty_{1,k},\ldots,T^{p}y_{1,k}\rangle; \end{align*} $$
$$ \begin{align*} \langle y_{2,0}, Ty_{2,0}, &\ldots,T^{L_1-1}y_{2,0}\rangle, \langle y_{2,1}, Ty_{2,1}, \ldots,T^{L_1-1}y_{2,1}\rangle,\ldots,\\ &\langle y_{2,k-1},Ty_{2,k-1},\ldots, T^{L_1-1}y_{2,k-1}\rangle, \langle y_{2,k},Ty_{2,k},\ldots,T^{p}y_{2,k}\rangle; \end{align*} $$
$$ \begin{align*}\cdots\end{align*} $$
$$ \begin{align*}\langle y_{m,0}, Ty_{m,0}, &\ldots,T^{L_1-1}y_{m,0}\rangle, \langle y_{m,1}, Ty_{m,1}, \ldots,T^{L_1-1}y_{m,1}\rangle ,\ldots,\\ &\langle y_{m,k-1},Ty_{m,k-1},\ldots, T^{L_1-1}y_{m,k-1}\rangle, \langle y_{m,k},Ty_{m,k},\ldots,T^{p}y_{m,k}\rangle. \end{align*} $$

By the non-uniform specification property, there exists $z_m\in X$ such that for $1\leq i\leq m$ , $0\leq j\leq k-1$ , and $0\leq l\leq L_1-1$ , we have

$$ \begin{align*} d(T^{jL_2+(i-1)(n-1+M(p+1,\varepsilon))+l}z_m,T^ly_{i,j})\leq\varepsilon \end{align*} $$

and for $1\leq i\leq m$ and $0\leq l\leq p$ , we have

$$ \begin{align*} d(T^{kL_2+(i-1)(n-1+M(p+1,\varepsilon))+l}z_m,T^ly_{i,k})\leq\varepsilon. \end{align*} $$

For $i\in \mathbb {N}$ , denote $h_i=(i-1)(n-1+M(p+1,\varepsilon ))$ , then $h_1=0$ and

$$ \begin{align*}n\leq h_{i+1}-h_{i}=n-1+M(p+1,\varepsilon)\leq n-1+L_3\leq n(1+\delta_2).\end{align*} $$

Since X is compact, we can choose z as an accumulation point of $\{z_m:m\geq 1\}$ . Then for any $i\geq 1$ ,

$$ \begin{align*} &|\{0\leq j\leq n-1: d(T^{h_i+j}z,T^jx_i)>\varepsilon\}|\leq k(M(L_1,\varepsilon)-1)=\frac{k(M(L_1,\varepsilon)-1)}{n}n\\&\quad =\frac{k(M(L_1,\varepsilon)-1)}{k(L_1+M(L_1,\varepsilon)-1)+p+1}n\leq \frac{M(L_1,\varepsilon)-1)}{L_1+M(L_1,\varepsilon)-1}n\leq\delta_1n. \end{align*} $$

Therefore, $(X,T)$ satisfies the approximate product property.

Theorem 3.6. Suppose $(X,T)$ satisfies the non-uniform specification property with $M(n,\varepsilon )$ , where

$$ \begin{align*} \sup_{\varepsilon>0}\liminf_{n\rightarrow\infty}\frac{M(n,\varepsilon)}{n}=0, \end{align*} $$

then $(X,T)$ satisfies properties (R3), (R4), and (R5).

Proof. Combining with Lemmas 3.5 and 2.22 completes the proof.

4. Proof of Theorem A

Let $\{\varepsilon _n\}_{n\geq 1}$ be the non-increasing sequence of positive real numbers from Lemma 2.12 for $M(n,\varepsilon )$ . Consider the one-side full shift $(\{0,1\}^{\mathbb {N}_0},T)$ . The metric of $\{0,1\}^{\mathbb {N}_0}$ is given by

$$ \begin{align*} d(x,y)=\sum_{n\geq0}\delta_n d'(x_n,y_n), \end{align*} $$

where $\delta _n= ({\varepsilon _n}/{2^n})-({\varepsilon _{n+1}}/{2^{n+1}})>0$ and $d'$ is the discrete metric on $\{0,1\}$ .

Let

$$ \begin{align*} c_0=\min\bigg\{1,\inf_{n\geq1}\min_{1\leq k\leq n}\frac{M(n-k+1,\varepsilon_k)-k-1}{n+1}\bigg\}. \end{align*} $$

By Lemma 2.12, we obtain that $c_0>0$ . Given $0<c\leq c_0$ , consider forbidden words

$$ \begin{align*} \mathcal{F}_c=\{1^s0^t1:cs>t>0\}, \end{align*} $$

then $\mathcal {F}\neq \emptyset $ . Define

$$ \begin{align*} X_c=X_c(\mathcal{F}_c) =\{x\in\{0,1\}^{\mathbb{N}_0}:x_ix_{i+1}\cdots x_j\notin\mathcal{F}_c \text{ for all } 0\leq i\leq j\}. \end{align*} $$

Then $X_c$ is a subshift of $\{0,1\}^{\mathbb {N}_0}$ and $T_c$ is defined as $T_c:=T|_{X_c}$ . Fix $0<c\leq c_0$ , for convenience, we rewrite $(X_c,T_c)$ as $(X,T)$ .

It can be checked that $(X,T)$ is a coded shift (that is, its language is freely generated by a countable set of words), so one could theoretically use existing literature such as [Reference Climenhaga and Thompson6] or [Reference Kwietniak, Ła̧cka, Oprocha, Kolyada, Möller, Moree and Ward16] (where they also prove equivalence of some mixing properties for coded subshifts), but since the system is simple, we give self-contained proofs.

First, we will show that $(X,T)$ satisfies the non-uniform specification property with $M(n,\varepsilon )$ . Without loss of generality, we assume that $\varepsilon \leq \varepsilon _0$ . Consider any integer $k\geq 2$ , any points $x^{(1)},\ldots ,x^{(k)}\in X$ , any non-negative integers $a_1,b_1,\ldots ,a_k,b_k$ with

$$ \begin{align*} a_1\leq b_1<\cdots<a_k\leq b_k \end{align*} $$

and

$$ \begin{align*} a_{i+1}-b_i\geq M(b_i-a_i+1,\varepsilon)\quad\text{for } 1\leq i\leq k-1, \end{align*} $$

and an integer p with $p\geq b_k-a_1+M(b_k-a_k+1,\varepsilon )$ . Let l be the non-negative integer such that $\varepsilon _{l+1}<\varepsilon \leq \varepsilon _l$ . Since

$$ \begin{align*} M(b_i-a_i+1,\varepsilon)\geq M(b_i-a_i+1,\varepsilon_l)\geq(l+1)^4\geq l+1, \end{align*} $$

we obtain that

$$ \begin{align*} a_{i+1}-b_i\geq M(b_i-a_i+1,\varepsilon)\geq l+1\quad\text{for } 1\leq i\leq k-1 \end{align*} $$

and $p\geq b_k-a_1+M(b_k-a_k+1,\varepsilon )\geq b_k-a_1+l+1$ . So we can define

$$ \begin{align*} z'=(x^{(1)}_{0}\cdots x^{(1)}_{b_1-a_1+l}0^{a_2-b_1-l-1} x^{(2)}_{0}\cdots x^{(2)}_{b_2-a_2+l}\cdots x^{(k)}_{0}\cdots x^{(k)}_{b_k-a_k+l}0^{p+a_1-b_k-l-1})^\infty \end{align*} $$

and let $z=T^{pa_1-a_1}z'$ . Clearly, $T^{a_1}z=z'$ and $T^pz=z$ .

We claim that $z\in X$ . For $w\in \{0,1\}^*$ and $w\notin \mathcal {F}$ , clearly $w0^\infty \in X$ , so we just need to show that z does not contain any forbidden word. Since $\varepsilon \leq \varepsilon _l$ , we obtain by the definition of c that

(4.4) $$ \begin{align} M(b_i-a_i+1,\varepsilon)-l-1\geq M(b_i-a_i+1,\varepsilon_l)-l-1\geq c(b_i-a_i+l+1). \end{align} $$

Suppose for a contradiction that z contains a forbidden word $u=1^s0^t1$ with $cs>t>0$ . Since $x^{(i)}\in X$ and $u\in \mathcal {F}$ , u cannot be contained in any $x^{(i)}$ . Therefore, $0^t$ must contain an entire $0^{a_{i+1}-b_i-l}$ or $0^{p+a_1-b_k-l}$ , and $1^s$ must be contained in some $x^{(i)}$ . By equation (4.4), it means that

$$ \begin{align*} t\geq a_{i+1}-b_i-l-1 &\geq M(b_i-a_i+1,\varepsilon)-l-1\\ &\geq c(b_i-a_i+l+1)\geq cs>t \end{align*} $$

or

$$ \begin{align*} t\geq p+a_1-b_k-l-1 &\geq M(b_k-a_k+1,\varepsilon)-l-1\\ &\geq c(b_k-a_k+l+1)\geq cs>t, \end{align*} $$

which is a contradiction. Therefore, $z\in X$ .

Now we will show that

$$ \begin{align*} d(T^{n-a_i}x^{(i)},T^nz)\leq\varepsilon\quad\text{for } a_i\leq n\leq b_i,1\leq i\leq k. \end{align*} $$

By the definition of z, it is easy to see that

$$ \begin{align*} z_n=x^{(i)}_{n-a_i}\quad\text{for } a_i\leq n\leq b_i+l,1\leq i\leq k, \end{align*} $$

so we obtain that

$$ \begin{align*} d(T^{n-a_i}x^{(i)},T^nz)\leq d(T^{b_i-a_i}x^{(i)},T^{b_i}z) \leq\sum_{k\geq l+1}\delta_k\leq\varepsilon_{l+1}<\varepsilon \end{align*} $$

for $a_i\leq n\leq b_i,1\leq i\leq k$ . Therefore, $(X,T)$ satisfies the non-uniform specification property with $M(n,\varepsilon )$ .

We will show now that statement (1) holds and start with

(4.5) $$ \begin{align} \overline{\mathcal{M}_T^{\mathrm{co}}(X)}=\overline{\mathcal{M}_T^{\mathrm{erg}}(X)}. \end{align} $$

It is well known that $\mathcal {M}_T^{\mathrm {co}}(X)\subseteq \mathcal {M}_T^{\mathrm {erg}}(X)$ and $G_{\mu }\neq \emptyset $ for ergodic measure $\mu $ , so it suffices to show that

(4.6) $$ \begin{align} \overline{\mathcal{M}_T^{\mathrm{co}}(X)}\supseteq\{\mu\in\mathcal{M}_T(X):G_{\mu}\neq\emptyset\}. \end{align} $$

Fix any invariant measure $\mu $ with $G_{\mu }\neq \emptyset $ and given a generic point $x\in G_{\mu }$ . If $\mu $ is a Dirac measure, then the argument is trivial. Now we assume that $\mu $ is not a Dirac measure. By the assumption, there are infinite $0$ and $1$ terms contained in $x_0,x_1,\ldots $ . Write ${x=1^{s_1}0^{t_1}1^{s_2}0^{t_2}\ldots }$ with $t_i>0$ for $i\geq 1$ and $s_i>0$ for $i>1$ . Given $\varepsilon>0$ , there exists $L\in \mathbb {N}$ such that $d(x,y)\leq {\varepsilon }/{3}$ whenever $x_i=y_i$ for any $0\leq i\leq L-1$ . Since x is a generic point of $\mu $ , there exists j sufficiently large such that

$$ \begin{align*} \rho(\delta_x^N,\mu)<\frac{\varepsilon}{3},\quad N\geq L\quad\text{and}\quad\frac{L}{N}\mathrm{diam}(X)\leq\frac{\varepsilon}{3}, \end{align*} $$

where $N=\sum _{i=1}^j(s_i+t_i)$ . Define $y=(1^{s_1}0^{t_1}1^{s_2}0^{t_2}\cdots 1^{s_j}0^{t_j})^\infty $ . Clearly, y is a periodic point of X with period N and $d(T^ix,T^iy)\leq {\varepsilon }/{3}$ for any $0\leq i\leq N-L$ . By Lemma 2.2, we have

$$ \begin{align*}\rho(\delta_x^N,\delta_y^N)\leq\frac{\varepsilon}{3}+\frac{L}{N}\mathrm{diam}(X)\leq\frac{2\varepsilon}{3}\end{align*} $$

and thus $\rho (\mu ,\delta _y^N)<{\varepsilon }/{3}+{2\varepsilon }/{3}=\varepsilon $ . This completes the proof of equation (4.6).

Now we will show that

(4.7) $$ \begin{align} \overline{\mathcal{M}_T^{\mathrm{co}}(X)}\subsetneq\mathcal{M}_T(X). \end{align} $$

Arbitrarily consider a CO-measure $\nu =\delta _y^p$ , where $y\in \mathrm {Per}(T)$ with minimal period $p\geq 2$ . For $x\in X$ , define

(4.8) $$ \begin{align} \chi_m(x)=\frac{1}{m}\sum_{n=0}^{m-1}x_n. \end{align} $$

Then $\chi _m\in C(X)$ and we claim that

(4.9) $$ \begin{align} \int_X\chi_m\,{d}\nu\leq\frac{1}{c+1}\quad\text{for all } m\in\mathbb{N}. \end{align} $$

Since $y\in \mathrm {Per}_p(T)$ , for every $m\in \mathbb {N}$ , one has

$$ \begin{align*} \frac{1}{p}\sum_{i=0}^{p-1}\chi_m(T^iy) =\frac{1}{pm}\sum_{i=0}^{p-1}\sum_{n=0}^{m-1}(T^iy)_n =\frac{1}{pm}\sum_{n=0}^{m-1}\bigg(\sum_{i=0}^{p-1}y_{i+n}\bigg) =\frac{1}{p}\sum_{i=0}^{p-1}y_i, \end{align*} $$

and thus

$$ \begin{align*} \int_X\chi_m\,{d}\nu=\frac{1}{p}\sum_{i=0}^{p-1}y_i. \end{align*} $$

Since $p\geq 2$ , we can assume that $y=1^{s_1}0^{t_1}1^{s_2}0^{t_2}\cdots 1^{s_k}0^{t_k}$ , where $s_i,t_i>0$ with $cs_i\leq t_i$ for $i=1,2,\ldots ,k$ . Then we obtain that

$$ \begin{align*} \sum_{i=0}^{p-1}y_i=\sum_{i=1}^ks_i\leq\frac{1}{c+1}\sum_{i=1}^k(s_i+t_i)=\frac{p}{c+1}. \end{align*} $$

Hence,

$$ \begin{align*} \int_X\chi_m\,{d}\nu\leq\frac{1}{c+1}\quad\text{for all } m\in\mathbb{N}. \end{align*} $$

This completes the proof of equation (4.9), and we conclude that

$$ \begin{align*} \int_X\chi_m\,{d}\nu\leq\frac{1}{c+1} \end{align*} $$

for all $\nu \in \mathcal {M}_T^{\mathrm {co}}(X)\setminus \{\delta _{1^{\infty }}\}$ and $m\in \mathbb {N}$ .

Now, consider $\mu = ({c\delta _{0^\infty }+2\delta _{1^\infty }})/({c+2})\in \mathcal {M}_T(X)$ . Clearly,

$$ \begin{align*} \int_X\chi_m\,{d}\mu=\frac{2}{c+2}\in\bigg(\frac{1}{c+1},1\bigg) \end{align*} $$

for all $m\in \mathbb {N}$ , so $\mu \notin \overline {\mathcal {M}_T^{\mathrm {co}}(X)}$ and this completes the proof of equation (4.7).

We now prove that for $\delta>0$ sufficiently small, one has

(4.10) $$ \begin{align} \overline{\mathcal{M}_{T,\delta}^{\mathrm{co}}(X)} \subsetneq\overline{\mathcal{M}_T^{\mathrm{co}}(X)}. \end{align} $$

We have shown that for every $m\in \mathbb {N}$ ,

$$ \begin{align*} \int_X\chi_m\,{d}\nu\leq\frac{1}{c+1} \quad\text{for } \nu\in\mathcal{M}_T^{\mathrm{co}}(X)\setminus\{\delta_{1^\infty}\} \end{align*} $$

and obviously

$$ \begin{align*} \int_X\chi_m\,{d}\nu=1 \quad\text{for }\nu=\delta_{1^{\infty}}. \end{align*} $$

Therefore, $\delta _{1^\infty }$ is an isolated point of $\mathcal {M}_T^{\mathrm {co}}(X)$ and thus $d_H(S_{\delta _{1^\infty }},X)=\varepsilon _0>0$ , and we obtain that

$$ \begin{align*} \overline{\mathcal{M}_{T,\delta}^{\mathrm{co}}(X)} \subseteq\overline{\mathcal{M}_T^{\mathrm{co}}(X)}\setminus\{\delta_{1^\infty}\} \subsetneq\overline{\mathcal{M}_T^{\mathrm{co}}(X)} \end{align*} $$

for $0<\delta <\varepsilon _0$ . This completes the proof of equation (4.10). Combining equations (4.5), (4.7), and (4.10), we conclude that statement (1) holds.

Now, we will show that statement (2) holds. According to Theorem 3.2, $h_{\mathrm {top}}(T)>0$ . Given $\delta>0$ , it is easy to see that $|\mathrm {Per}_{n,\delta }(T)|\leq |\mathcal {L}_n(X)|$ and thus

(4.11) $$ \begin{align} \limsup_{n\rightarrow\infty}\frac1n\log|\mathrm{Per}_{n,\delta}(T)| \leq\lim_{n\rightarrow\infty}\frac1n\log|\mathcal{L}_n(X)|=h_{\mathrm{top}}(T). \end{align} $$

For $n\geq 2$ , let

$$ \begin{align*} \mathcal{P}_n:=\{w\in\mathcal{L}_n(X):w_0=1,w_{n-1}=0,w^{\infty}\in\mathrm{Per}_n(T)\}. \end{align*} $$

Define

$$ \begin{align*} \mathcal{N}_n=\{(r,s,t)\in\mathbb{Z}^3:0\leq r,s,t\leq n,r+s+t\leq n-2,cs\leq t\}. \end{align*} $$

For $(r,s,t)\in \mathcal {N}_n$ , define $\pi (r,s,t):\mathcal {P}_{n-(r+s+t)}\rightarrow \mathcal {L}_n(X)$ given by

$$ \begin{align*} \pi(r,s,t)(w)=0^rw1^s0^t. \end{align*} $$

Clearly, $\pi (r,s,t)$ is injective for every $(r,s,t)\in \mathcal {N}_n\cup \{(0,0,0)\}$ . This implies ${|\mathcal {P}_k|\leq |\mathcal {L}_n(X)|}$ for $k=2,\ldots ,n$ and thus

(4.12) $$ \begin{align} \sum_{k=2}^n|\mathcal{P}_k|\leq n|\mathcal{L}_n(X)|. \end{align} $$

However, for each $u\in \mathcal {L}_n(X)\setminus \{0^{n-k-l}1^{k}0^l:0\leq k,l\leq n,k+l\leq n\}$ , there exists $(w,r,s,t)$ such that $u=\pi (r,s,t)(w)$ . This implies

(4.13) $$ \begin{align} |\mathcal{L}_n(X)|-(n+1)^2\leq (n+1)^3\bigg(\sum_{k=2}^n|\mathcal{P}_k|\bigg). \end{align} $$

Combining equations (4.12) and (4.13), we conclude that

(4.14) $$ \begin{align} \lim_{n\rightarrow\infty}\frac1n\log\bigg(\sum_{k=2}^n|\mathcal{P}_k|\bigg) =\lim_{n\rightarrow\infty}\frac1n\log|\mathcal{L}_n(X)|=h_{\mathrm{top}}(T). \end{align} $$

Now, we will show that

$$ \begin{align*} h_{\mathrm{top}}(T)\leq\liminf_{n\rightarrow\infty}\frac1n\log|\mathrm{Per}_{n,\delta}(T)|. \end{align*} $$

Choose $m\in \mathbb {N}$ and $w\in \mathcal {P}_{m}$ such that for any $x\in \mathrm {Per}_n(T)$ with $n\geq m$ , we have ${x\in \mathrm {Per}_{n,\delta }(T)}$ provided that w is a word of x. Now, fix $n\in \mathbb {N}$ with $n\geq 2+m$ . For $0\leq r\leq n-(2+m)$ , define $\tilde {\pi }(r):\mathcal {P}_{n-(r+m)}\rightarrow \mathrm {Per}_{n,\delta }(T)$ given by

$$ \begin{align*} \tilde{\pi}(r)(u)=(0^ruw)^\infty. \end{align*} $$

Then $\tilde {\pi }(r_1)(u_1)\neq \tilde {\pi }(r_2)(u_2)$ whenever $(r_1,u_1)\neq (r_2,u_2)$ . Hence,

$$ \begin{align*}|\mathrm{Per}_{n,\delta}(T)|\geq\sum_{k=2}^{n-m}|\mathcal{P}_k|.\end{align*} $$

By equation (4.14), we have

(4.15) $$ \begin{align} \liminf_{n\to\infty}\frac{1}{n}\log|\mathrm{Per}_{n,\delta}(T)|\geq\lim_{n\to\infty} \frac{1}{n}\log\bigg(\sum_{k=2}^{n-m}|\mathcal{P}_k|\bigg)=h_{\mathrm{top}}(T). \end{align} $$

Combining equations (4.11) and (4.15), we conclude that

$$ \begin{align*} h_{\mathrm{top}}(T)=\lim_{n\rightarrow\infty}\frac1n\log|\mathrm{Per}_{n,\delta}(T)|. \end{align*} $$

This completes the proof of statement (2).

Finally, we prove statement (3). Since $\delta _{1^\infty }$ is an isolated point of $\mathcal {M}_T^{\mathrm {co}}(X)$ and $\overline {\mathcal {M}_T^{\mathrm {co}}(X)}=\overline {\mathcal {M}_T^{\mathrm {erg}}(X)}$ , $\delta _{1^\infty }$ is also an isolated point of $\mathcal {M}_T^{\mathrm {erg}}(X)$ , and hence, $(X,T)$ does not satisfy property (R4). Since $\overline {\mathcal {M}_{T_c}^{\mathrm {erg}}(X_c)} \subsetneq \mathcal {M}_{T_c}(X_c)$ , from the definition of entropy-dense property, $(X,T)$ does not satisfy property (R5).

5. Proof of Theorem B

We consider the cluster of dynamical systems $\{(X_c,T_c)\}_{0<c\leq c_0}$ defined in Theorem A. Fix $0<c\leq c_0$ . For convenience, we rewrite $(X_c,T_c)$ as $(X,T)$ . We have shown that $(X,T)$ satisfies the non-uniform specification property with $M(n,\varepsilon )$ . Define

$$ \begin{align*} \mathcal{U}=\mathcal{M}_T(X)\setminus\overline{\mathcal{M}_T^{\mathrm{co}}(X)}. \end{align*} $$

By Theorem A, $\mathcal {U}$ is a non-empty open subset of $\mathcal {M}_T(X)$ . We need to show that the statements (1)–(3) hold.

Statement (1) follows from the Proposition 5.1.

Proposition 5.1. Let X be the subshift defined in Theorem A and $\mathcal {U}$ be as above, then

$$ \begin{align*} \mathcal{U}=\{\mu\in\mathcal{M}_T(X):G_{\mu}=\emptyset\}. \end{align*} $$

Proof. We have shown that

$$ \begin{align*} \{\mu\in\mathcal{M}_T(X):G_{\mu}\neq\emptyset\}\subseteq\overline{\mathcal{M}_T^{\mathrm{co}}(X)} \end{align*} $$

in the proof of Theorem A (see equation (4.6)) and thus

$$ \begin{align*} \mathcal{U}\subseteq\{\mu\in\mathcal{M}_T(X):G_{\mu}=\emptyset\}. \end{align*} $$

It suffices to show that

(5.16) $$ \begin{align} \overline{\mathcal{M}_T^{\mathrm{co}}(X)}\subseteq\{\mu\in\mathcal{M}_T(X):G_{\mu}\neq\emptyset\}. \end{align} $$

Arbitrarily given $\mu \in \overline {\mathcal {M}_T^{\mathrm {co}}(X)}$ , we wish to show that $G_{\mu }\neq \emptyset $ . We only need consider the case that $\mu \in \overline {\mathcal {M}_T^{\mathrm {co}}(X)}\setminus \mathcal {M}_T^{\mathrm {co}}(X)$ .

Since $\mathrm {Per}_1(T)$ is closed, we can choose $y^{(n)}\in X$ with minimal period $p_n\geq 2$ such that $\nu _n=\delta _{y^{(n)}}^{p_n}\rightarrow \mu $ . Let $d_n=\rho (\nu _n,\mu )$ . Denote by $B_n$ the closed ball in $\mathcal {M}_T(X)$ with center $\nu _n$ and radius $r_n=d_n+2^{-n}$ .

It is easy to check that the sequence $\{B_n:n\in \mathbb {N}\}$ satisfies the following:

  1. (a) $B_n\cap B_{n+1}\cap \{\mu \}\neq \emptyset $ ;

  2. (b) $\bigcap \limits \nolimits _{k\geq 1}\bigcup \nolimits _{n\geq k}B_n=\{\mu \}$ ;

  3. (c) $\lim \nolimits _{n\rightarrow \infty }r_n=0$ .

Without loss of generality, for every $n\in \mathbb {N}$ , we assume that

$$ \begin{align*} y^{(n)}=(1^{s_1(n)}0^{t_1(n)}\cdots 1^{s_{k(n)}(n)}0^{t_{k(n)}(n)})^{\infty}, \end{align*} $$

where $s_i(n),t_i(n)>0$ and $cs_i(n)\leq t_i(n)$ for $1\leq i\leq k(n)$ . Define

$$ \begin{align*} w^{(n)}=1^{s_1(n)}0^{t_1(n)}\cdots1^{s_{k(n)}(n)}0^{t_{k(n)}(n)}\in\mathcal{L}_{p_n}(X). \end{align*} $$

Let $M_j$ be sufficiently large such that $\mathrm {diam}[w]<2^{-j-2}$ for all $w\in \mathcal {L}_{M_j}(X)$ . Choose $N_j$ sufficiently large such that

(5.17) $$ \begin{align} N_{j+1}>4^{j+2}\bigg(\sum_{i=1}^j(p_iN_i+2M_i+p_{i+1})\bigg) \quad\text{and}\quad\frac{M_j+p_{j+1}}{N_j}<4^{-j-1} \end{align} $$

for $j\in \mathbb {N}$ . Let $0\leq R_j<p_{j+1}$ such that $p_{j+1}$ divides $\sum \nolimits _{i=1}^j(p_iN_i+2M_i+R_i)$ and define

(5.18) $$ \begin{align} x=(w^{(1)})^{N_1}y^{(1)}_0\cdots y^{(1)}_{M_1-1}0^{M_1+R_1} (w^{(2)})^{N_2}y^{(2)}_0\cdots y^{(2)}_{M_2-1}0^{M_2+R_2}\cdots\!. \end{align} $$

Clearly, $x\in X$ . We introduce x in another point if view. Let

$$ \begin{align*} & a_1=0 & & b_1=p_1N_1 &\\ & a_2=p_1N_1+2M_1+R_1 & & b_2=a_2+p_2N_2 &\\ & \cdots &\\ & a_{n+1}=\sum_{j=1}^n(p_jN_j+2M_j+R_j) & & b_{n+1}=a_{n+1}+p_{n+1}N_{n+1}. & \end{align*} $$

It is easy to see that $a_{n+1}=b_n+2M_n+R_n$ . Hence, by equation (5.17), we can easily see that

(5.19) $$ \begin{align} \frac{a_{n+1}-b_n+p_{n+1}}{N_n} \leq\frac{a_{n+1}-b_n+a_n}{N_n}\leq 4^{-n} \quad\text{and}\quad\frac{a_n}{b_n}\leq4^{-n-1}. \end{align} $$

Let

$$ \begin{align*} \begin{cases} x_n=y^{(j)}_{n} & \text{if } a_j\leq n\leq b_j+M_j-1\text{ for some } j\in\mathbb{N},\\ x_n=0 & \text{if } b_j+M_j\leq n<a_{j+1}\text{ for some } j\in\mathbb{N}, \end{cases} \end{align*} $$

and define $x=x_0x_1\cdots $ . It is easy to check that the definition above is equivalent to equation (5.18). Note that

(5.20) $$ \begin{align} d(T^nx,T^ny^{(j)})<2^{-j-2}\quad\text{for } a_j\leq n\leq b_j-1. \end{align} $$

Now we will show that $\delta _x^k\rightarrow \mu $ . Let $i=i(k)$ be the positive integer such that ${b_i\leq k<b_{i+1}}$ . Define

$$ \begin{align*} \alpha_k= \begin{cases} \displaystyle\frac{b_i-a_i}{b_i-a_i+k-r-a_{i+1}} & \text{if } k>a_{i+1},\\ 1 & \text{if } k\leq a_{i+1}, \end{cases} \end{align*} $$

where $0\leq r<p_{i+1}$ is an integer such that $p_{i+1}$ divides $k-r-a_{i+1}$ when $k>a_{i+1}$ . Define $\gamma _k=\alpha _k\nu _i+(1-\alpha _k)\nu _{i+1}$ . Arbitrarily given $f\in C(X)$ with $\|f\|\leq 1$ , we claim that

$$ \begin{align*} \lim_{k\rightarrow\infty}\bigg|{\int_X}f\,{d}\gamma_k-\int_Xf\,{d}\delta_x^k\bigg| = 0. \end{align*} $$

For any $\varepsilon{\kern-1.7pt}>{\kern-1.7pt}0$ , where we denote by $\omega_f(\varepsilon)$ the oscillation ${\max\{|f(y{\kern-1pt}){\kern-1.5pt}-{\kern-1.5pt}f(z{\kern-1pt})|{\kern-1pt}:{\kern-1pt}d(y,{\kern-1pt}z){\kern-1pt}\leq{\kern-1pt}\varepsilon\}}$ , choose a positive integer K sufficiently large such that for any $k\geq K$ , $i=i(k)$ , the following hold:

  • $4^{-i+1}<\varepsilon $ ;

  • $\omega _f(2^{-i-3})\leq \omega _f(2^{-i-2})< {\varepsilon }/{4}$ ;

  • ${M_i}/{N_i}< {\varepsilon }/{16}$ .

By equation (5.20), we obtain that

$$ \begin{align*} \bigg|\frac{1}{b_i-a_i}\sum_{j=a_i}^{b_i-1}f(T^jy^{(i)}) -\frac{1}{b_i-a_i}\sum_{j=a_i}^{b_i-1}f(T^jx)\bigg| \leq\omega_f(2^{-i-2})<\frac{\varepsilon}{4}. \end{align*} $$

This implies

(5.21) $$ \begin{align} \bigg|{\int_X}f\,{d}\nu_i- \frac{1}{b_i-a_i}\sum_{j=a_i}^{b_i-1}f(T^jx)\bigg|<\frac{\varepsilon}{4}. \end{align} $$

If $k\leq a_{i+1}$ , then $\gamma _k=\nu _i$ . Since $\|f\|\leq 1$ , by equations (5.19), (5.21), and Lemma 2.3, we conclude that

$$ \begin{align*} \bigg|{\int_X}f\,{d}\delta_x^k-\int_Xf\,{d}\gamma_k\bigg| &\leq\bigg|{\int_X}f\,{d}\delta_x^k-\frac{1}{b_i-a_i}\sum_{j=a_i}^{b_i-1}f(T^jx)\bigg|\\ &\quad +\bigg|\frac{1}{b_i-a_i}\sum_{j=a_i}^{b_i-1}f(T^jx)-\int_Xf\,{d}\nu_i\bigg|\\ &<\bigg|\frac{1}{k}\!\sum_{j=0}^{k-1}\! f(T^jx)-\frac{1}{b_i-a_i}\!\sum_{j=a_i}^{b_i-1}\!f(T^jx)\bigg| +\frac{\varepsilon}{4} \leq\frac{\varepsilon}{4}+\frac{2(k-b_i+a_i)}k\\ &\leq\frac{\varepsilon}{4}+\frac{2(a_{i+1}-b_i+a_i)}{N_i} <\frac{\varepsilon}{4}+2\cdot 4^{-i}<\varepsilon. \end{align*} $$

If $k>a_{i+1}$ , then one has

(5.22) $$ \begin{align} \int_Xf\,{d}\nu_{i+1}=\frac{1}{k-r-a_{i+1}}\sum_{j=a_{i+1}}^{k-r-1}f(T^jy^{(i+1)}). \end{align} $$

By equation (5.20), we obtain that

(5.23) $$ \begin{align} \bigg|\frac{1}{k-r-a_{i+1}}\sum_{j=a_{i+1}}^{k-r-1}f(T^jy^{(i+1)}) -\frac{1}{k-r-a_{i+1}}\sum_{j=a_{i+1}}^{k-r-1}f(T^jx)\bigg| \leq\omega_f(2^{-i-3})<\frac{\varepsilon}{4}. \ \end{align} $$

By equations (5.22) and (5.23), we obtain that

(5.24) $$ \begin{align} \bigg|{\int_X}f\,{d}\nu_{i+1}-\frac{1}{k-r-a_{i+1}}\sum_{j=a_{i+1}}^{k-r-1}f(T^jx)\bigg| <\frac{\varepsilon}{4}. \end{align} $$

Define $S\kern1.4pt{=}\kern1.4pt([a_i,b_i-1]\kern1.3pt{\cup}\kern1.3pt [a_{i+1},k-r-1])\kern1.3pt{\cap}\kern1.3pt \mathbb {Z}$ . Clearly, ${|S|\kern1.4pt{=}\kern1.4ptk-r-a_{i+1}+b_i-a_i}$ . Note that

(5.25) $$ \begin{align} \frac{1}{|S|}\sum_{j\in S}f(T^jx) =\frac{\alpha_k}{b_i-a_i}\sum_{j=a_i}^{b_i-1}f(T^jy^{(i)}) +\frac{1-\alpha_k}{k-r-a_{i+1}}\sum_{j=a_{i+1}}^{k-r-1}f(T^jy^{(i+1 )}). \end{align} $$

Since $\|f\|\leq 1$ , by equation (5.24) and Lemma 2.3, we conclude that

$$ \begin{align*} \bigg|{\int_{X}}f\,{d}\delta_x^k-\frac{1}{|S|}\sum_{j\in S}f(T^jx)\bigg| &=\bigg|\frac{1}{k}\sum_{j=0}^{k-1}f(T^jx)-\frac{1}{|S|}\sum_{j\in S}f(T^jx)\bigg|\\ &\leq\frac{2(k-|S|)}{k}=\frac{2(a_{i+1}+r-b_i+a_i)}{k}\\ &\leq\frac{2(a_{i+1}-b_i+p_{i+1})}{N_i}+\frac{a_i}{b_i}. \end{align*} $$

Hence, we obtain by equation (5.19) that

(5.26) $$ \begin{align} \bigg|{\int_{X}}f\,{d}\delta_x^k-\frac{1}{|S|}\sum_{j\in S}f(T^jx)\bigg| <\frac34 \varepsilon. \end{align} $$

Combining equations (5.21), (5.24), (5.25), and (5.26), we conclude that

$$ \begin{align*} \bigg|{\int_X}f\,{d}\delta_x^k-\int_Xf\,{d}\gamma_k\bigg| &\leq\,\bigg|{\int_{X}}f\,{d}\delta_x^k-\frac{1}{|S|}\sum_{j\in S}f(T^jx)\bigg|\\ &\quad +\alpha_k\bigg|\frac{1}{b_i-a_i}\sum_{j=a_i}^{b_i-1}f(T^jx)-\int_Xf\,{d}\nu_i\bigg|\\ &\quad +(1-\alpha_k)\bigg|\frac{1}{k-r-a_{i+1}}\sum_{j=a_{i+1}}^{k-r-1}f(T^jx) -\int_Xf\,{d}\nu_{i+1}\bigg|\\ &<\frac{3\varepsilon}{4}+\alpha_k\frac{\varepsilon}{4}+(1-\alpha_k)\frac{\varepsilon}{4}=\varepsilon. \end{align*} $$

Therefore, for any $k\geq K$ , one has

$$ \begin{align*} \bigg|{\int_X} f\,{d}\delta_x^k-\int_Xf\,{d}\gamma_k\bigg|<\varepsilon. \end{align*} $$

Hence,

$$ \begin{align*} \lim_{k\rightarrow\infty}\bigg|{\int_X}f\,{d}\gamma_k-\int_Xf\,{d}\delta_x^k\bigg|=0, \end{align*} $$

and thus

$$ \begin{align*} \mu=\lim_{k\rightarrow\infty}\gamma_k=\lim_{k\rightarrow\infty}\delta_x^k. \end{align*} $$

We have shown that $x\in G_{\mu }$ . This implies equation (5.16) and completes the proof of Proposition 5.1.

Since $G_{\mu }\neq \emptyset $ , by Theorem 3.2, $G_{\mu }$ is dense in X. So statement (2) holds by Proposition 5.1.

All that is left is to show that statement (3) holds, namely there exists $\mu _0\in \mathcal {U}$ with $G^{\mu _0}\neq \emptyset $ . We just need to show that there exists $x\in X$ and $\mu _0\in V_T(x)$ such that $G_{\mu _0}=\emptyset $ .

Consider

$$ \begin{align*} x=101^N0^N1^{N^2}0^{N^2}1^{N^3}0^{N^3}\ldots, \end{align*} $$

where $N\geq 2$ will be determined later. Since $c\leq 1$ , we obtain that $x\in X$ . We wish to find $\mu _0\in V_T(x)$ such that $G_{\mu _0}=\emptyset $ . Let $K_j=2(1+N+\cdots +N^{j-1})+N^j$ . We claim that

(5.27) $$ \begin{align} \frac{1}{c+1}<\lim_{j\rightarrow\infty}\int_X\chi_1\,{d}\delta_x^{K_j}<1, \end{align} $$

where $\chi _1(x)=x_0$ is defined by equation (4.8).

Clearly,

$$ \begin{align*} \int_X\chi_1\,{d}\delta_x^{K_j}=\frac{1+N+\cdots+N^j}{K_j} =\frac{N^{j+1}-1}{N^{j+1}+N^j-2}. \end{align*} $$

Hence,

$$ \begin{align*} \lim_{j\rightarrow\infty}\int_X\chi_1\,{d}\delta_x^{K_j} =\lim_{j\rightarrow\infty}\frac{N^{j+1}-1}{N^{j+1}+N^j-2}=\frac{N}{N+1}. \end{align*} $$

Let $N> ({1}/{c})$ and then

$$ \begin{align*} \lim_{j\rightarrow\infty}\int_X\chi_1\,{d}\delta_x^{K_j} =\frac{N}{N+1}\in\bigg(\frac{1}{c+1},1\bigg). \end{align*} $$

Let $\mu _0$ be an accumulation point of $\delta _x^{K_j}$ . By equation (5.27), we obtain that

$$ \begin{align*} \frac{1}{c+1}<\int_X\chi_1\,{d}\mu_0<1. \end{align*} $$

Now we show that $G_{\mu _0}=\emptyset $ . Suppose for a contradiction that $G_{\mu _0}\neq \emptyset $ . Arbitrarily given $x\in G_{\mu _0}$ , clearly $\mu _0$ is not a Dirac measure, so there are infinite 0 and 1 terms contained in $x_0,x_1,\ldots $ . Suppose $x=1^{s_1}0^{t_1}1^{s_2}0^{t_2}\cdots $ with $t_i>0$ for $i\geq 1$ and $s_i>0$ for $i>1$ . Let $n_i=s_i+t_i$ and $N_j=n_1+\cdots +n_j$ . Since $cs_i\leq t_i$ , one has

$$ \begin{align*} \int_X\chi_1\,{d}\delta_x^{N_j} =\frac{1}{N_j}\sum_{n=0}^{N_j-1}\chi_1(T^nx) =\frac{1}{N_j}\sum_{i=1}^js_i\leq\frac{1}{c+1}. \end{align*} $$

This implies

$$ \begin{align*} \frac{1}{c+1}<\int_X\chi_1\,{d}\mu_0 =\lim_{j\rightarrow\infty}\int_X\chi_1\,{d}\delta_x^{N_j}\leq\frac{1}{c+1}, \end{align*} $$

which is a contradiction. Hence, $\mu _0\in \mathcal {U}$ and $G^{\mu _0}\neq \emptyset $ . By Theorem 3.2(8), $G^{\mu _0}$ is residual in X. This completes the proof of Theorem B.

Acknowledgements

We thank an anonymous referee for their careful reading and patience on the previous version of the manuscript. The authors are partially supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (No. 12071082) and Natural Science Foundation of Shanghai (No. 23ZR1405800).

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