Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-8ctnn Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-29T04:13:54.922Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Topological and metric emergence of continuous maps

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 December 2024

MARIA CARVALHO
Affiliation:
CMUP & Departamento de Matemática, Faculdade de Ciências da Universidade do Porto, Rua do Campo Alegre s/n, 4169–007 Porto, Portugal. e-mail: mpcarval@fc.up.pt
FAGNER B. RODRIGUES
Affiliation:
Departamento de Matemática, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul, Av. Bento Gonçalves, 9500, 91509–900 Porto Alegre, Brazil. e-mail: fagnerbernardini@gmail.com
PAULO VARANDAS
Affiliation:
CMUP, Faculdade de Ciências da Universidade do Porto Rua do Campo Alegre s/n, 4169–007 Porto, Portugal. e-mail: paulo.varandas@ufba.br
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

We prove that every homeomorphism of a compact manifold with dimension one has zero topological emergence, whereas in dimension greater than one the topological emergence of a $C^0-$generic homeomorphism is maximal, equal to the dimension of the manifold. We also show that the metric emergence of a continuous self-map on compact metric space has the intermediate value property.

Type
Research Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BYCreative Common License - NCCreative Common License - ND
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/), which permits non-commercial re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is unaltered and is properly cited. The written permission of Cambridge University Press must be obtained for commercial re-use or in order to create a derivative work.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2025. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of Cambridge Philosophical Society

1. Introduction

The topological entropy is an invariant by topological conjugation which quantifies to what extent nearby orbits diverge as the dynamical system evolves. On a compact metric space, a Lipschitz map has finite topological entropy. However, if the dynamics is just continuous, the topological entropy may be infinite. Actually, K. Yano proved in [ Reference Yano36 ] that, on compact smooth manifolds with dimension greater than one, the set of homeomorphisms having infinite topological entropy are $C^0-$ generic. So the topological entropy is not an effective label to classify them. Bringing together dimension and dynamics, E. Lindenstrauss and B. Weiss [ Reference Lindenstrauss and Weiss24 ] introduced the notion of upper metric mean dimension of a continuous self-map f of a compact metric space (X, d), which may be thought as a mean upper box-counting dimension. Its value is metric dependent and always upper bounded by the upper box dimension of the space X, defined by

\begin{align*}\mathrm{\overline{dim}_B}\, X \,=\, \limsup_{\varepsilon\,\to\, 0^+}\,\frac{\log S_X(\varepsilon),}{-\log \varepsilon}\end{align*}

where $S_X(\varepsilon)$ is the maximum cardinality of an ${\varepsilon}-$ separated subset of X (see [ Reference Falconer12, Reference Pesin29 ] for more details). Thus, it is natural to ask what is the upper metric mean dimension of a $C^0-$ generic homeomorphism of X, and whether there exists a homeomorphism of X having a prescribed value in the interval $[0, \mathrm{\overline{dim}_B}\, X]$ as its upper metric mean dimension. These questions were partially answered in [ Reference Carvalho, Rodrigues and Varandas7 ], where we proved that there exists a $C^0-$ Baire generic subset of homeomorphisms of any compact smooth manifold with dimension $\mathrm{\dim} X \geqslant 2$ whose elements have the highest possible upper metric mean dimension, namely $\mathrm{\dim} X$ ; and that any level set of the metric mean dimension of continuous interval self-maps is $C^0-$ dense.

Recently, Berger and Bochi introduced in [ Reference Berger and Bochi3 ] another concept to quantify the statistical complexity of a system: the topological emergence of a continuous self-map of a compact metric space X, which evaluates the size of the space of Borel $f-$ invariant and ergodic probability measures (cf. Subsection 1·1 for the definition and more details). To illustrate its importance, they proved, among other equally interesting general results for diffeomorphisms on surfaces, that within $C^{1+\alpha}$ conformal expanding maps admitting a hyperbolic basic set $\Lambda$ the topological emergence is the largest possible, that is, equal to the upper box dimension of $\Lambda$ . This means that, when $\mathrm{\overline{dim}_B}\, \Lambda \gt 0$ , the number of ${\varepsilon}-$ distinguished ergodic probability measures grows super-exponentially with respect to the parameter ${\varepsilon}$ . Moreover, Berger and Bochi also proved that there is an open set $\mathcal{U}$ of $C^\infty-$ surface diffeomorphisms and a generic subset $\mathcal{G}$ of $\mathcal{U}$ such that the Lebesgue measure has topological emergence equal to 2 with respect to each element of $\mathcal{G}$ (cf. [ Reference Berger and Bochi3 , theorem D]).

Our first aim in this work is to characterise the topological emergence of $C^0-$ generic homeomorphisms acting on compact manifolds.

1.1. Topological emergence

We start by recalling the concept of topological emergence which measures the complexity of the space of ergodic probability measures preserved by a map. Given a compact metric space X and a continuous map $f \colon X \to X$ , we denote by $\mathfrak{B}$ the $\sigma-$ algebra of the Borel subsets of X, by $\mathcal{M}_1(X)$ the space of Borel probability measures on X, by $\mathcal{M}_f(X)$ its subset of $f-$ invariant elements, and by $\mathcal{M}_f^{\mathrm{erg}}(X)$ the subset of $f-$ invariant and ergodic probability measures.

Definition 1. Let X be a compact metric space, $f \colon X \to X$ be a continuous map and $\mathcal{D}$ be a distance on the space $\mathcal{M}_1(X)$ such that $(\mathcal{M}_1(X),\mathcal{D})$ is compact. The topological emergence map associated to f is the function

\begin{align*}{\varepsilon} \in \,\,]0, +\infty[ \quad \mapsto \quad \mathcal E_{\mathrm{top}}(f)({\varepsilon}),\end{align*}

where $\mathcal E_{\mathrm{top}}(f)({\varepsilon})$ denotes the minimal number of balls of radius ${\varepsilon}$ in $(\mathcal{M}_1(X),\mathcal{D})$ necessary to cover the set $\mathcal{M}_f^{\mathrm{erg}}(X)$ .

It is clear from the previous definition that the topological emergence depends on the metric we consider in $\mathcal{M}_1(X)$ . In what follows, we will always assume that $\mathcal{D}$ is one of the Wasserstein metrics $W_p$ , for some $p \geqslant 1$ , or the Lévy–Prokhorov metric LP (both metrics are defined in Subsection 2·1). These metrics induce in $\mathcal{M}_1(X)$ the weak $^*-$ topology (cf. [ Reference Strassen32 ]).

Definition 2. The upper and lower metric orders of a compact metric space (Y, D), defined by Kolmogorov and Tikhomirov [ Reference Kolmogorov and Tihomirov20 ], are given respectively by

\begin{align*}\overline{\mathrm{mo}}\,(Y) = \limsup_{\varepsilon\,\to\, 0^+}\,\frac{\log\log S_Y(\varepsilon)}{-\log \varepsilon}\qquad\text{and}\qquad\underline{\mathrm{mo}}\,(Y) = \liminf_{\varepsilon\,\to\, 0^+}\,\frac{\log\log S_Y(\varepsilon),}{-\log \varepsilon}\end{align*}

where $S_Y(\varepsilon)$ denotes the maximal cardinality of an ${\varepsilon}-$ separated subset of Y. In case both quantities coincide we simply denote them by $\mathrm{mo}(Y)$ , the metric order of the set Y. This notions may be extended in a straightforward way to nonempty subsets of Y.

It is worth referring that Definitions 1 and 2 are related. Indeed, given a compact metric space Y, the minimal number of balls in Y with radius ${\varepsilon}$ necessary to cover a subset $A\subset Y$ is bounded from above by the maximal number of disjoint balls with radius ${\varepsilon}/2$ that intersect A, and is bounded from below by the maximal number of disjoint balls of radius ${\varepsilon}$ that intersect A.

To define the next concept, we need to select either a Wasserstein metric or the Lévy–Prokhorov metric, but its value does not depend on this choice (cf. [ Reference Berger and Bochi3 ]).

Definition 3. The topological emergence of a continuous map $f\colon X \to X$ on a compact metric space X, which we will denote by $\mathcal E_{\mathrm{top}}(f)$ , is the upper metric order of the space of Borel $f-$ invariant ergodic probability measures on X endowed with either the Wasserstein metric $W_p$ , for some $p \in [1, +\infty[$ , or the Lévy–Prokhorov metric (we denote by LP).

We specify that, in what follows, $\log \log 1 = 0$ . This way, a uniquely ergodic map f is granted a zero topological emergence, as expected.

Berger and Bochi proved in [ Reference Berger and Bochi3 , theorem 1·3]) that, if $f\colon X \to X$ is a continuous map acting on a compact metric space X whose upper and lower box dimensions are $\mathrm{\overline{dim}_B}\, X$ and $\mathrm{\underline{dim}_B}\, X$ , respectively, then for any $p \geqslant 1$ one has

(1·1) \begin{align}\mathrm{\underline{dim}_B}\, X \,\leqslant\, \underline{\mathrm{mo}}\,(\mathcal M_1(X),\mathrm W_p) \,\leqslant\, \overline{\mathrm{mo}}\,(\mathcal M_1(X),\mathrm W_p) \,\leqslant\, \mathrm{\overline{dim}_B}\, X\end{align}

and that similar inequalities hold if we consider $\mathcal M_1(X)$ endowed with the distance LP. In particular, this ensures that

(1·2) \begin{align}\limsup_{\varepsilon\,\to\,0^+}\,\frac{\log \log\mathcal E_{\mathrm{top}}(f)(\varepsilon)}{-\log\varepsilon} \,=\, \overline{ \mathrm{mo}}\,(\mathcal M_f^{\mathrm{erg}}(X),\mathrm W_p) \,\leqslant\, \overline{ \mathrm{mo}}\,(\mathcal M_1(X),\mathrm W_p) \,\leqslant \, \mathrm{\overline{dim}_B}\, X.\end{align}

1.2. Metric emergence

Fix a compact metric space (X, d), a continuous map $f\colon X \to X$ , a positive integer n and $x \in X$ . The $n^{\text{th}}-$ empirical measure associated to x is defined by

\begin{align*}\mathrm{e}^f_n(x) = \frac{1}{n}\,\sum_{i=0}^{n-1}\,\delta_{f^i(x)},\end{align*}

where $\delta_z$ denotes the Dirac probability measure supported on z. We recall that, if $\mu$ is an $f-$ invariant probability measure, then the Birkhoff’s ergodic theorem guarantees that for $\mu-$ almost every $x\in X$ the sequence $\big(\mathrm{e}^f_n(x)\big)_{n\,\in\,\mathbb N}$ converges in the weak $^*-$ topology to a unique probability measure (cf. [ Reference Walters35 ]), which we denote by $\mathrm{e}^f(x)$ and call empirical measure associated to x by f. For instance, given a periodic point P of period k, its orbit supports a unique invariant probability measure, so called periodic Dirac measure, defined by $\mu_P = \frac{1}{k}\, \sum_{i=0}^{k-1} \, \delta_{f^i(P)}$ , which coincides with $\mathrm{e}^f(P)$ . Misiurewicz gives in [ Reference Misiurewicz25 ] an example of a homeomorphism $f\colon \mathbb{T}^2 \to \mathbb{T}^2$ of the $2-$ torus that is expansive, has the specification property and such that, for Lebesgue almost every point $x \in \mathbb{T}^2$ , the sequence $\big(\mathrm{e}^f_n(x)\big)_{n\,\in\,\mathbb N}$ accumulates on the whole $\mathcal M_f(\mathbb{T}^2)$ , which in this example is very large.

Definition 4. Let (X, d) be a compact metric space, $f \colon X \to X$ be a continuous map and $\mu$ be a probability measure on X (not necessarily $f-$ invariant). The metric emergence map of $\mu$ with respect to f assigns to each ${\varepsilon}\gt 0$ the minimal number $\mathcal{E}_\mu(f)({\varepsilon}) = N$ of probability measures $\mu_1,\ldots,\mu_N$ on X such that

(1·3) \begin{equation}\limsup_{n\,\to\,+\infty}\,\int_{X}\,\min_{1\,\leqslant\, i\,\leqslant\, N} \,\mathcal{D}(\mathrm{e}^f_n(x),\,\mu_i)\; d\mu(x) \,\leqslant\, \varepsilon.\end{equation}

The metric emergence of $\mu$ with respect to f is the limit, if well defined,

(1·4) \begin{equation}\mathcal{E}_\mu(f) \,=\, \limsup_{{\varepsilon} \, \to \, 0^+} \, \frac{\log \log \mathcal{E}_\mu(f)({\varepsilon})}{-\log {\varepsilon}}.\end{equation}

The previous concepts were introduced in [ Reference Berger2 ] when X is a compact manifold and $\mu$ is the Lebesgue measure, and generalised in [ Reference Berger and Bochi3 ]. In rough terms, $\mathcal{E}_\mu(f)$ essentially evaluates how far is $\mu$ from being ergodic. If $\mu$ is $f-$ invariant then $(\mathrm{e}^f_n(x))_{n\,\in\,\mathbb N}$ converges to $\mathrm{e}^f(x)$ at $\mu-$ almost every x, and so (1·3) can be replaced by

(1·5) \begin{equation}\int_{X}\,\min_{1\,\leqslant\, i\,\leqslant\, N}\, \mathcal{D}(\mathrm{e}^f(x),\,\mu_i)\;d\mu(x) \,\leqslant \,\varepsilon.\end{equation}

So, if $\mu$ is $f-$ invariant and ergodic, its metric emergence map is minimal, equal to 1.

By [ Reference Berger and Bochi3 , proposition 3·14], it is known that, if $f \colon X \to X$ is a continuous map of a compact metric space X and $\mu \in \mathcal{M}_f(X)$ , then

\begin{align*}\mathcal{E}_\mu(f)({\varepsilon}) \, \leqslant \, \mathcal{E}_{\mathrm{top}}(f)({\varepsilon}) \quad \quad \forall\, {\varepsilon} \gt 0\end{align*}

provided both emergences are computed using the same $W_p$ or LP metric on $\mathcal{M}_1(X)$ .

1.3 Main results

Let X be [0,1] or $\mathbb S^1$ , endowed with the Euclidean metric. Denote by $\mathrm{Homeo}_+(X,d)$ the set of order preserving homeomorphisms of X with the uniform metric $D_{C^0}$ given by

\begin{align*}D_{C^0}(f,g) = \sup_{x \,\in \,X}\,\big\{d(f(x), g(x)), \, d(f^{-1}(x), g^{-1}(x))\big\}.\end{align*}

The set $\mathrm{Homeo}_+(X,d)$ with this distance is a Baire space. Our starting point is the following property of the topological emergence of these homeomorphisms.

Theorem 1. If $X=[0,1]$ or $X=\mathbb S^1$ endowed with the Euclidean metric, then every map in $\mathrm{Homeo}_+(X,d)$ has zero topological emergence.

Now let (X, d) be a compact connected smooth manifold X (with or without boundary) of dimension at least two. We will consider both the space $\mathrm{Homeo}(X,d)$ of homeomorphisms on X with the uniform metric $D_{C^0}$ and its subset $\mathrm{Homeo}_\mu(X,d)$ of those homeomorphisms which preserve a Borel probability measure $\mu$ on X. For reasons we will explain later, we are mainly interested in $\mathbb{O}\mathbb{U}-$ probability measures (so named after the work [ Reference Oxtoby and Ulam27 ] of Oxtoby and Ulam; see also [ Reference Akin1 ]), which comply with the following conditions:

  1. (C 1) [Non-atomic] For every $x \in X$ one has $\mu(\{x\})=0$ ;

  2. (C 2) [Full support] For every nonempty open set $U \subset X$ one has $\mu(U)\gt 0$ ;

  3. (C 3) [Boundary with zero measure] $\mu(\partial X)=0$ .

It is known that the set of $\mathbb{O}\mathbb{U}-$ probability measures is generic in $\mathcal{M}_1(X)$ (see [ Reference Denker, Grillenberger and Sigmund11 ]).

The next result shows that, contrary to Theorem 1, in a higher dimensional setting the topological emergence of $C^0-$ generic conservative homeomorphisms attains its maximum possible value.

Theorem 2. Let X be a compact smooth manifold with dimension $\mathrm{\dim} X \geqslant 2$ , d be a metric compatible with the smooth structure of X and $\mu$ be a $\mathbb{O}\mathbb{U}-$ probability measure on X. There are $C^0-$ Baire generic subsets $\mathfrak R \subset \mathrm{Homeo}(X,d)$ and $\mathfrak R_\mu \subset \mathrm{Homeo}_\mu(X,d)$ such that:

\begin{align*}\overline{\mathrm{mo}}\,(\mathcal{M}^{\mathrm{erg}}_f(X),\,\mathrm W_p) \,=\, \mathrm{dim} X \quad \quad \forall \,f \in \mathfrak R\end{align*}

and

\begin{align*}\mathrm{mo}\,(\mathcal{M}^{\mathrm{erg}}_f(X),\,\mathrm W_p) \,=\, \mathrm{dim} X \quad \quad \forall \,f \in \mathfrak R_\mu.\end{align*}

In the measure preserving setting, Theorem 2 is a consequence of the fact that, if $\mu$ is a $\mathbb{O}\mathbb{U}-$ probability measure on X, then a $C^0-$ generic element f in $\mathrm{Homeo}_\mu(X)$ is ergodic (cf. [ Reference Oxtoby and Ulam27 ]), has a dense set of periodic points (cf. [ Reference Daalderop and Fokkink10 ]) and the shadowing property [ Reference Guihéneuf and Lefeuvre16 ], and therefore satisfies the specification property (cf. [ Reference Denker, Grillenberger and Sigmund11 ]). This implies that the set of ergodic probability measures is dense in $\mathcal M_f(X)$ , so we are left to show that the metric order of $\mathcal M_f(X)$ is equal to $\mathrm{\dim} X$ . This is easier to prove since $\mathcal M_f(X)$ is convex. The argument ultimately depends on the fact that the existence of pseudo-horseshoes is $C^0-$ generic in the conservative context (see [ Reference Daalderop and Fokkink10 ] and Section 4 for more details).

The proof of Theorem 2 for dissipative (that is, non-conservative) homeomorphisms also builds on the construction of pseudo-horseshoes, which were introduced in [ Reference Yano36 ] and redesigned in [ Reference Carvalho, Rodrigues and Varandas7 ] to satisfy two conditions: to exist in all sufficiently small scales and to exhibit an adequate separation of sufficiently large sets of points in all steps of their construction. However, as the denseness of ergodic probability measures on the set of the invariant ones is not $C^0-$ generic within $\mathrm{Homeo}(X)$ (cf. [ Reference Denker, Grillenberger and Sigmund11, Reference Hurley17, Reference Kwietniak, Lacka and Oprocha21 ]), the argument in the conservative case does not extend to the non-conservative context. To prove that the topological emergence in this setting is $C^0-$ generically maximal we will carry out another upgrade on the construction of the pseudo-horseshoes to guarantee that we can find sufficiently many ergodic probability measures adequately separated with respect to a Wasserstein metric (see Section 5 for more details).

Given a homeomorphism $f \colon X \to X$ , the map which assigns to each nonempty compact $f-$ invariant subset Z of X the topological entropy of the restriction of f to Z fails to satisfy the intermediate value property. See, for instance, the minimal homeomorphism on the $2-$ torus with positive entropy presented in [ Reference Rees31 ]. A. Katok asked whether the metric entropy map satisfies the intermediate value property. More precisely, Katok conjectured that, for every $C^2$ diffeomorphism $f \colon X \to X$ , acting on a compact connected manifold X with finite topological entropy, and for every $c \in [0, h_{\mathrm{top}}(f)]$ , there is a Borel $f-$ invariant and ergodic probability measure $\mu$ such that the metric entropy $h_\mu(f)$ is equal to c. This conjecture has been positively answered in a number of contexts (cf. [ Reference Sun33 ] and references therein). After Theorem 2, one may likewise ask if the image of the metric emergence map of a $C^0-$ generic $f \in \mathrm{Homeo}_\mu(X)$ is $[0, \mathrm{\overline{dim}_B} X]$ . Supporting this question is the fact that for every continuous self-map f of a compact metric space there exists a Borel $f-$ invariant probability measure $\mu$ such that $\mathcal{E}_\mu(f)=\mathcal{E}_{\mathrm{top}}(f)$ (cf. [ Reference Berger and Bochi3 ]). Our next result generalises this assertion, providing a proof of the counterpart of Katok’s conjecture for the metric emergence.

Theorem 3. Let $f\colon X \to X$ be a continuous map on a compact metric space (X,d). Then:

  1. (a) the set

    \begin{align*}\mathcal{B}_f(X) \, = \, \big\{\mu \in \mathcal M_f(X) \colon \, \sup_{{\varepsilon} \gt 0} \,\mathcal{E}_\mu(f)({\varepsilon}) \gt 1 \big\}\end{align*}
    is convex;
  2. (b) the restriction to $\mathcal{B}_f(X)$ of the metric emergence is quasiconvex since

    \begin{align*}\mathcal{E}_{t\,\mu \,+\, (1-t)\,\nu}(f) \,=\,\max \big\{\mathcal{E}_\mu(f), \mathcal{E}_\nu(f) \big\} \quad \quad \forall\, \mu,\,\nu \in \mathcal{B}_f(X), \quad \forall\, t\in ]0,1[;\end{align*}
  3. (c) for every $0 \leqslant \beta \leqslant \mathcal{E}_{\mathrm{top}}(f)$ there is $\mu\in \mathcal{M}_f(X)$ such that $\mathcal{E}_\mu(f)=\beta$ .

It is known that for $C^0-$ generic volume preserving homeomorphisms the Lebesgue measure is ergodic (cf [ Reference Oxtoby and Ulam27 ]), so its metric emergence map is constant and equal to one. On the other hand, by Theorem 2, for $C^0-$ generic volume preserving homeomorphisms on a compact manifold with dimension at least two, one has $\mathcal{E}_{\mathrm{top}}(f) = \mathrm{\dim} X$ . This indicates that, $C^0-$ generically in the space of volume preserving homeomorphisms, the probability measure whose metric emergence attains the maximal value $\mathcal{E}_{\mathrm{top}}(f)$ is not the Lebesgue measure. Yet, in the space of $C^r$ diffeomorphisms, $r \geqslant 1$ , in any surface, there exists a $C^r-$ open subset for whose generic maps the Lebesgue measure has metric emergence equal to two (cf. [ Reference Berger and Bochi3 , theorem D]).

The proof of Theorem 3 relies on the following intermediate value property for the upper metric order map, which is of independent interest.

Theorem 4. Let (Z, d) be a compact metric space. The upper metric order function defined on the space of subsets of Z has the intermediate value property. More precisely, if $0 \leqslant \beta \leqslant \mathrm{\overline{mo}}\,(Z)$ , then there exists a subset $Y_\beta \subset Z$ such that $\mathrm{\overline{mo}}\,(Y_\beta) = \beta$ .

2. Preliminary information

For future use, in this section we will recall some definitions and previous results.

2.1. Metrics on $\mathcal M_1(X)$

Given a compact metric space (X, d) it is known that the space $\mathcal{M}_1(X)$ of the Borel probability measures on X is compact if endowed with the weak $^*-$ topology. Moreover, there are metrics on $\mathcal{M}_1(X)$ inducing this topology, the classic ones being the Wasserstein distances and the Lévy–Prokhorov distance. The former are defined by

\begin{align*}\mathrm{W_p}(\mu,\nu) = \inf_{\pi\,\in\,\Pi(\mu,\nu)}\,\left(\int_{X\times X}\,[d(x,y)]^p\;d\pi(x,y)\right)^{1/p},\end{align*}

where $p \in [1, +\infty[$ and $\Pi(\mu,\nu)$ denotes the set of probability measures on the product space $X\times X$ with marginals $\mu$ and $\nu$ (see [ Reference Villani34 ] and references therein for more details). The latter is defined by

\begin{align*}\mathrm{LP}(\mu,\nu) = \inf\,\Big\{\varepsilon > 0 \colon \,\, \forall\, E \in \mathfrak{B} \quad \forall\, \,\varepsilon\!-\!\text{neighbourhood}\;V_\varepsilon(E)\;\text{of}\;\textit{E}\;\text{one has} \end{align*}
\begin{align*}\quad \quad \quad \quad \quad \quad \quad \quad \quad \nu(E)\leqslant \mu(V_\varepsilon(E))+\varepsilon \quad \text{ and } \quad \mu(E)\leqslant \nu(V_\varepsilon(E))+\varepsilon \Big\}.\end{align*}

The reader can find more information about this distance in [ Reference Billingsley4 ].

Throughout the text we will say that two probability measures on a compact metric space X are ${\varepsilon}-$ apart if their supports are at a distance at least ${\varepsilon}$ in the Hausdorff metric, which we denote by $\mathrm{dist}_H$ ; more precisely,

\begin{align*}\mathrm{dist}_H \big(\mathrm{supp}(\mu), \, \mathrm{supp}(\nu)\big) \, \geqslant \,{\varepsilon},\end{align*}

where

(2·1) \begin{align} \mathrm{dist}_H & \big(\mathrm{supp}(\mu), \, \mathrm{supp}(\nu)\big) & \nonumber \\[5pt] & \,\,=\,\,\max\,\Big\{\sup_{\,x\, \in\, \mathrm{supp}(\mu)} \, \mathrm{dist}\big(x,\mathrm{supp}(\nu)\big), \;\, {}\sup_{\,y \,\in\, \mathrm{supp}(\nu)} \, \mathrm{dist}\big(y,\mathrm{supp}(\mu)\big) \Big\} \end{align}

and $\mathrm{dist}\big(a,\, A\big) = \inf\,\big\{d(a,x) \,|\, x \in A\big\}$ .

For example, if $N \in \mathbb{N}$ and $\{x_1,\, x_2, \, \cdots, x_N\}$ is an $\varepsilon-$ separated subset of X, then the Dirac measures $\delta_{x_1},\,\delta_{x_2}, \cdots, \delta_{x_N}$ are pairwise $\varepsilon-$ apart.

Remark 1. In [ Reference Berger and Bochi3 , theorem 1·6], the authors proved that, if $\mathcal C\subset \mathcal M_1(X)$ is a convex subset and we denote by $\mathcal A(\mathcal C,\varepsilon)$ the maximal cardinality of pairwise $\varepsilon-$ apart probability measures in $\mathcal C$ , then

\begin{align*}\min \,\left\{\inf_{p \,\in \,[1, +\infty[} \, \underline{\mathrm{mo}}\,(\mathcal C, \mathrm W_p), \,\,\, \underline{\mathrm{mo}}\,(\mathcal C, \mathrm{LP})\right\} \,\geqslant\, \liminf_{\varepsilon\,\to\, 0^+}\,\frac{\log \mathcal A(\mathcal C,\varepsilon)}{-\log\varepsilon}.\end{align*}

2.2. Pseudo-horseshoes

The main tool to prove our first theorem is a class of compact invariant sets, called pseudo-horseshoes. Such structures were used in [ Reference Yano36 ] to prove that $C^0-$ generic homeomorphisms, acting on compact manifolds (X, d) with dimension greater than one, have infinite topological entropy; and later in [ Reference Carvalho, Rodrigues and Varandas7 ] to show the existence of a $C^0-$ Baire generic subset $\mathfrak{R}_0 \subset \mathrm{Homeo}(X,d)$ where the metric mean dimension is maximal, equal to $\mathrm{\dim} X$ . In what follows we recall the main definitions and properties of pseudo-horseshoes on manifolds. We refer the reader to [ Reference Hurley17, Reference Hurley18 ], where one finds other relevant properties of the atractors and pseudo-horseshoes of generic homeomorphisms.

2.2.1. Pseudo-horseshoes in $\mathbb R^k$

Consider in $\mathbb{R}^k$ the norm

\begin{align*}\|(x_1, \cdots, x_k)\| \,=\, \max_{1\,\leqslant \,i\,\leqslant k} \,\,|x_i|.\end{align*}

Given $r \gt 0$ and $x \in \mathbb{R}^k$ , denote $D^k_r(x) = \big\{y \in \mathbb R^k \colon \|x - y\| \leqslant r\big\}$ and $D^k_r = D^k_r\big((0,\ldots,0)\big).$ For $1\leqslant j\leqslant k$ , let $\pi_j \colon \,\mathbb{R}^k \,\to\,\mathbb{R}^j$ be the projection on the first j coordinates. Let us now define pseudo-horseshoes with N legs ( $N\geqslant 2$ ).

Definition 5. Fix $r \gt 0$ , $x=(x_1, \ldots, x_k)$ and $y=(y_1, \ldots, y_k)$ in $\mathbb{R}^k$ , and take an open set $U \subset \mathbb R^k$ containing $D_r^k(x)$ . Having fixed a positive integer N, we say that a homeomorphism $\varphi \colon \,U \,\to\,\mathbb R^k$ has a pseudo-horseshoe of type N at scale r connecting x to y if the following conditions are satisfied:

  1. (i) $\varphi(x)=y$ ;

  2. (ii) $\varphi\Big(D_r^k(x)\Big) \subset \mathrm{int} \Big(D_r^{k-1}(\pi_{k-1}(y))\Big) \,\times \,\mathbb R$ ;

  3. (iii) for $i=0,1,\ldots,\left[\frac{N}{2}\right]$ ,

    \begin{align*}\varphi\Big(D_r^{k-1}(\pi_{k-1}(x)) \,\times\, \Big\{x_k - r + \frac{4ir}{N}\Big\} \Big) \subset \mathrm{int} \Big(D_r^{k-1}(\pi_{k-1}(y))\Big)\,\times\, (-\infty, \,y_k-r);\end{align*}
  4. (iv) for $i=0,1,\ldots,\left[\frac{N-1}{2}\right]$ ,

    \begin{align*}\varphi\left(D_r^{k-1}(\pi_{k-1}(x))\,\times\,\Big\{x_k - r + \frac{(4i+2)r}{N}\Big\}\right)\! \subset \mathrm{int} \Big(D_r^{k-1}(\pi_{k-1}(y))\Big)\times (y_k + r, \,+\infty);\end{align*}
  5. (v) for each $i \in \{0,\ldots,N-1\}$ , the intersection

    \begin{align*} V_i=D_r^k(y) \,\cap \,\varphi\left(D_r^{k-1}(x) \times \left[x_k - r + \frac{2ir}{N}, \,x_k - r + \frac{(2i+2)r}{N}\right]\right)\end{align*}
    is connected and satisfies:
  6. (a) $ V_i \,\cap\, (D_r^{k-1}(y) \times \{-r\}) \not=\emptyset$ ;

  7. (b) $ V_i \,\cap \,(D_r^{k-1}(y)\times \{r\}) \not=\emptyset;$

  8. (c) each connected component of $ V_i \cup \partial D_r^k(y)$ is simply connected.

Each $V_i$ is called a vertical strip of the pseudo-horseshoe.

Fig. 1. Positive iterates of a pseudo-horseshoe on a compact manifold (top) and their geometric representation on $\mathbb R^k$ (bottom) using local charts which are signaled by downward arrows.

2.2.2. Pseudo-horseshoes in manifolds

So far, pseudo-horseshoes were defined in open sets of $\mathbb{R}^k$ . Now we convey this notion to manifolds, where the number of legs $N\geqslant 2$ is determined by $k=\mathrm{\dim} X$ and the scale ${\varepsilon}\gt 0.$

Definition 6. Let (X, d) be a compact smooth manifold of dimension $\mathrm{\dim} X$ . Given $f \in \mathrm{Homeo}(X,d)$ and constants $0 \lt \alpha \lt 1$ , $\delta \gt 0$ , $0 \lt {\varepsilon} \lt \delta$ and $q \in \mathbb{N}$ , we say that f has a coherent $(\delta,\,{\varepsilon},\,q,\,\alpha)-$ pseudo-horseshoe if we may find a pairwise disjoint family of open subsets $(\mathcal{U}_i)_{0\,\leqslant\, i \,\leqslant\, q-1}$ of X such that

\begin{align*}f(\mathcal{U}_{i}) \cap \mathcal{U}_{(i+1)\mathrm{mod} \, q} \neq \emptyset \quad \quad \forall\,\, i\end{align*}

and a collection $(\phi_i)_{0\,\leqslant\, i\, \leqslant\, q-1}$ of homeomorphisms

\begin{align*}\phi_i\colon D_{\delta}^{\mathrm{\dim} X} \subset \mathbb{R}^{\mathrm{\dim} X} \quad \to \quad \mathcal{U}_i \subset X\end{align*}

satisfying, for every $0 \leqslant i\leqslant q-1$ :

  1. (i) $\left(f\circ \phi_i\right)(D_{\delta}^{\mathrm{\dim} X} ) \subset \mathcal{U}_{(i+1)\mathrm{mod} \, q}$ ;

  2. (ii) the map

    \begin{align*}\psi_i = \phi_{(i+1)\mathrm{mod} \, q}^{-1}\circ f\circ \phi_i \colon \quad D_{\delta}^{\mathrm{\dim} X} \to\, {\mathbb R}^{\mathrm{\dim} X}\end{align*}
    has a pseudo-horseshoe of type $\lfloor\Big(\frac1{\varepsilon}\Big)^{\alpha \, \mathrm{\dim} X}\rfloor$ at scale $\delta$ connecting $x=0$ to itself with vertical strips $\{V_{i,j}\}_{j}$ with $j \in \{1, 2, \ldots, \lfloor\Big(\frac1{\varepsilon}\Big)^{\alpha \, \mathrm{\dim} X}\rfloor\}$ ;
  3. (iii) denoting $H_{i,j} = \psi_i^{-1} \big({V}_{i,j}\big)$ for every $j \in \{1, 2, \ldots, \lfloor\Big(\frac1{\varepsilon}\Big)^{\alpha \, \mathrm{\dim} X}\rfloor\}$ , which we refer to as horizontal strips, one has for every $j_1 \neq j_2 \in \{1, 2, \ldots, \lfloor\Big(\frac1{\varepsilon}\Big)^{\alpha \, \mathrm{\dim} X}\rfloor\}$

    \begin{align*}\min\Big\{\inf\{\|a-b\|\colon \, a \in V_{i,j_1}, \,b \in V_{i,j_2}\}, \, \inf\{\|z-w\|\colon \, z \in H_{i,j_1}, \,w \in H_{i,j_2}\}\Big\} \gt {\varepsilon};\end{align*}
  4. (iv) for every $0 \leqslant i \leqslant q-1$ and every $j_1 \neq j_2 \in \{1, 2, \ldots, \lfloor\Big(\frac1{\varepsilon}\Big)^{\alpha \, \mathrm{\dim} X}\rfloor\}$ , the horizontal strip $H_{i,j_1}$ crosses the vertical strip $V_{(i+1)\mathrm{mod} \, q, j_2}$ , where by crossing we mean that there exists a foliation of each horizontal strip $H_{i,j} \subset D_{\delta}^{\mathrm{\dim} X}$ by a family $\mathcal C_{i,j}$ of continuous curves $c\colon [0,1] \to H_{i,j}$ such that $\psi_i(c(0))\in D_{\delta}^{{\mathrm{\dim} X}-1} \times \{-\delta\}$ and $\psi_i(c(1))\in D_{\delta}^{{\mathrm{\dim} X}-1}\times \{\delta\}$ .

Regarding the parameters $(\delta, {\varepsilon}, q, \alpha)$ that identify the pseudo-horseshoe, we remark that $\delta$ is a small scale determined by the size of the q domains and the charts so that item (i) of Definition 6 holds; ${\varepsilon}$ is the scale at which a large number (which is inversely proportional to ${\varepsilon}$ and involves $\alpha$ ) of finite orbits is separated, to comply with the demand (ii)-(iii) of Definition 6; and $\alpha$ is conditioned by the room in the manifold needed to build the convenient amount of ${\varepsilon}-$ separated points. In [ Reference Yano36 ], Yano constructed pseudo-horseshoes of type N for every $N\geqslant 2$ , while coherent pseudo-horseshoes were introduced and constructed in [ Reference Carvalho, Rodrigues and Varandas7 ].

Coherent $(\delta,{\varepsilon},q,\alpha)-$ pseudo-horseshoes have three important features. (We refer the reader to [ Reference Carvalho, Rodrigues and Varandas7 ] for more details.) Firstly, these pseudo-horseshoes persist under $C^0-$ small perturbations. Secondly, every homeomorphism which has a coherent $(\delta, {\varepsilon}, q, \alpha)-$ pseudo-horseshoe also has a $(q,{\varepsilon})-$ separated set with at least $\lfloor\Big(1/{\varepsilon}\Big)^{\alpha\, \mathrm{\dim} X}\rfloor$ elements. The third main property of coherent pseudo-horseshoes is the following proposition.

Fix a strictly decreasing sequence $({\varepsilon}_k)_{k \,\in \,\mathbb{N}}$ in the interval $\,]0,1[$ converging to zero and let $L\gt 0$ be a bi-Lipschitz constant for the charts of a finite atlas of X. Denote by $\mathcal O({\varepsilon}_k, \alpha)$ the set of homeomorphisms $g \in \mathrm{Homeo}(X,d)$ such that g has a coherent $(\delta, L {\varepsilon}_k, q, \alpha)-$ pseudo-horseshoe, for some $\delta\gt 0$ , $q \in \mathbb{N}$ and $L\gt 0$ .

Proposition 1. ([ Reference Carvalho, Rodrigues and Varandas7 ]). For every $\alpha \in \,\,]0,1[$ and $k \in \mathbb{N}$ , the set $\mathcal O({\varepsilon}_k, \alpha)$ is $C^0-$ open. Moreover, given $K \in \mathbb{N}$ , the union

\begin{align*}{\mathcal O}_K(\alpha)\,= \,\bigcup_{\substack{k \,\, \in \,\, \mathbb{N} \\ k \,\, \geqslant \,\, K}} \,\mathcal O({\varepsilon}_k, \alpha)\end{align*}

is $C^0-$ dense in $\mathrm{Homeo}(X,d)$ . In particular,

\begin{align*}\mathfrak{R}_0 \, = \, \bigcap_{\alpha\, \in \,\,]0,1[ \,\cap\, \mathbb Q} \; \bigcap_{K \,\in \,\mathbb{N}} \; \bigcup_{\substack{k \,\, \in \,\, \mathbb{N} \\ k \,\, \geqslant\,\, K}}\,\mathcal O({\varepsilon}_k, \alpha)\end{align*}

is a $C^0-$ Baire generic subset of $\mathrm{Homeo}(X,d)$ .

Regarding the conservative setting, given an $\mathbb{O}\mathbb{U}-$ probability measure $\mu$ on X, the perturbation technics in [ Reference Guihéneuf15 ] allow us to make $C^0-$ small perturbations of any $\mu-$ preserving homeomorphism in order to create coherent pseudo-horseshoes. In particular, one ensures that the space $\mathcal O_\mu({\varepsilon}_k, \alpha)$ of homeomorphisms in $\mathrm{Homeo}_\mu(X,d)$ exhibiting a coherent $(\delta, L{\varepsilon}_k, q, \alpha)-$ pseudo-horseshoe is $C^0-$ open and dense in $\mathrm{Homeo}_\mu(X,d)$ . A detailed construction of these $C^0-$ open dense subsets $\mathcal O_\mu({\varepsilon}_k, \alpha)$ was carried in [ Reference Lacerda and Romana23 , theorem A], leading to a result similar to Proposition 1 in the setting of volume preserving homeomorphisms: the set

\begin{equation*}\mathfrak{R}_1 \,=\,\bigcap_{\alpha \,\in \,\,]0,1[\, \cap\, \mathbb Q} \,\, \bigcap_{K \,\in\, \mathbb{N}} \,\bigcup_{\substack{k \,\, \in \,\, \mathbb{N} \\ k \,\, \geqslant\,\, K}}\,\mathcal O_\mu({\varepsilon}_k, \alpha)\end{equation*}

is $C^0-$ Baire generic in $\mathrm{Homeo}_\mu(X,d)$ .

2.3. Specification property

According to Bowen [ Reference Bowen6 ], a continuous map $f \colon X \to X$ on a compact metric space (X, d) satisfies the specification property if for any $\delta\gt 0$ there exists $T(\delta) \in \mathbb{N}$ such that any finite block of iterates by f can be $\delta-$ shadowed by an individual orbit provided that the time lag of each block is larger than the prefixed time $T(\delta)$ . More precisely, f satisfies the specification property if for any $\delta\gt 0$ there exists an integer $T(\delta) \in \mathbb{N}$ such that for every $k \in \mathbb{N}$ , any points $x_1, \ldots, x_k$ in X, any sequence of positive integers $n_1, \ldots, n_k$ and every choice of integers $T_1, \ldots, T_k$ with $T_i \geqslant T(\delta)$ , there exists a point $x_0$ in X such that

\begin{align*}d\big(f^j(x_0),\,f^j(x_1)\big) \,\leqslant\, \delta \quad \quad \forall \, 0 \leqslant j \leqslant n_1\end{align*}

and

\begin{align*}d\Big(f^{j + n_1 + T_1 + \ldots + n_{i-1} + T_{i-1}}(x_0) \;,\; f^j(x_i)\Big) \leqslant \delta \quad \quad \forall \, 2 \leqslant i \leqslant k \quad \forall\, 0\leqslant j\leqslant n_i.\end{align*}

It is known that full shifts on finitely many symbols satisfy the specification property; besides, factors of maps with the specification property also enjoy this property (cf. [ Reference Denker, Grillenberger and Sigmund11 ]). Moreover, if $\mu$ is a $\mathbb{O}\mathbb{U}-$ probability measure, the specification property is $C^0-$ Baire generic in $\mathrm{Homeo}_\mu(X,d)$ (cf. [ Reference Guihéneuf and Lefeuvre16 ]).

The importance of the specification property in the study of the topological emergence is illustrated by the fact that it guarantees the denseness of the set of periodic measures in the space of invariant probability measures (cf. [ Reference Denker, Grillenberger and Sigmund11 ]), together with the following result, essentially stated by Bochi in [ Reference Bochi5 ].

Lemma 1. Let (X,d) be a compact metric space and $f \colon X\to X$ be a continuous map such that $\overline{\mathcal M^{\mathrm{erg}}_f(X)}=\mathcal M_f(X)$ . Take a sequence $(\varepsilon_n)_{n \, \in \, \mathbb{N}}$ of positive real numbers satisfying $\lim_{n\,\to\, +\infty}\,\varepsilon_n=0$ . Assume that there exist constants $C, \,\gamma \gt 0$ such that, for every $n \in\mathbb N$ , there is an $f-$ invariant finite subset $F_n \subset X$ containing only periodic orbits and satisfying the conditions:

  1. (i) any two distinct orbits in $F_n$ are uniformly $\varepsilon_n-$ separated (in the Hausdorff distance) from each other;

  2. (ii) the number of periodic orbits of $F_n$ is bounded from below by $C\, (1/\varepsilon_n)^{\gamma}$ .

Then

\begin{align*}\limsup_{\varepsilon\,\to\,0^+}\,\frac{\log\;\log\mathcal E_{\mathrm{top}}(f)(\varepsilon)}{-\log\varepsilon} \,\geqslant \gamma.\end{align*}

In particular, if $\gamma={\mathrm{\overline{dim}_B}\, X}$ , then $\mathcal E_{\mathrm{top}}(f)\,=\, \mathrm{\overline{dim}_B}\, X$ .

Proof. Fix $n \in \mathbb N$ and denote by $N_{\mathrm{per}}(F_n)$ the the number of periodic orbits of $F_n$ . Consider the set of ergodic probability measures supported on each orbit in $F_n$ , whose distinct elements are $\varepsilon_n-$ apart due to condition (i). Given $\varepsilon\gt 0$ , take $N \in\mathbb N$ such that $\varepsilon_n \leqslant \varepsilon$ for every $n \geqslant N$ . Then

\begin{align*}\mathcal A(\mathcal M_f(X),\varepsilon) \,\geqslant\, \mathcal A(\mathcal M_f(X), \varepsilon_n) \,\geqslant\, N_{\mathrm{per}}(F_n) \quad \quad \forall\, n \geqslant N,\end{align*}

where $\mathcal A(\mathcal M_f(X),\varepsilon)$ is the maximal cardinality of pairwise $\varepsilon-$ apart probability measures in $\mathcal M_f(X)$ . According to Remark 1, these inequalities together with condition (ii) imply that

\begin{align*}\underline{\mathrm{mo}}\,(\mathcal M_f(X),\mathrm W_p) \,\geqslant \, \gamma.\end{align*}

Moreover, by assumption, the closure of $\mathcal M^{\mathrm{erg}}_f(X)$ is $\mathcal M_f(X)$ , so

\begin{align*}\underline{\mathrm{mo}}\,(\mathcal M^{\mathrm{erg}}_f(X),\mathrm W_p) \,= \,\underline{\mathrm{mo}}\,(\mathcal M_f(X),\mathrm W_p)\, \geqslant \,\gamma\end{align*}

as claimed. This proves the first statement of the lemma.

In the particular case of $\gamma=\mathrm{\overline{dim}_B}\, X$ , we conclude more, since, as a consequence of [ Reference Berger and Bochi3 , equation 2·2, theorem 1·3], we know that

\begin{align*}\overline{\mathrm{mo}}\,(\mathcal M^{\mathrm{erg}}_f(X), \mathrm W_p) \,\leqslant\, \mathrm{\overline{dim}_B}\, X.\end{align*}

Thus, $\mathrm{mo}\,(\mathcal M^{\mathrm{erg}}_f(X),\mathrm W_p) = \mathrm{\overline{dim}_B}\, X$ .

3. Proof of Theorem 1

Assume that $X = [0,1]$ . Given $f \in \mathrm{Homeo}_+([0,1])$ , it is immediate to conclude that the non-wandering set of f, say $\Omega(f)$ , coincides with the set of fixed points (we denote by $\mathrm{Fix}(f)$ ). Indeed, each orbit by f is a monotonic bounded sequence, so it converges and, by the continuity of f, the limit is a fixed point. In particular, one has

\begin{align*}\mathcal M^{\mathrm{erg}}_f([0,1]) \,=\, \Big\{\delta_x \colon \,f(x) = x\Big\}\end{align*}

hence $(\mathcal M^{\mathrm{erg}}_f(X),W_p)$ is isometric to a subset of (X, d). This implies that $\mathcal E_{\mathrm{top}}(f)(\varepsilon) = \mathcal O({\varepsilon}^{-1})$ for every sufficiently small ${\varepsilon}\gt 0$ , and so $\mathcal E_{\mathrm{top}}(f)= 0$ . In particular, for any $f \in \mathrm{Homeo}_+([0,1])$

\begin{align*}0 \, = \, \mathcal E_{\mathrm{top}}(f) \, = \, \sup\, \big\{\mathrm{dim}_B(\mu) \colon \, \mu \in \mathcal M^{\mathrm{erg}}_f([0,1])\big\},\end{align*}

where

\begin{align*}\mathrm{dim}_B(\mu) \, = \, \limsup_{{\varepsilon} \, \to \, 0^+}\, \frac{\log \, \mu(B(x,{\varepsilon}))}{\log \, {\varepsilon}}.\end{align*}

If $f \in \mathrm{Homeo}_+(\mathbb S^1)$ has rational rotation number $\rho(f)$ , then there is a conjugation between the restriction of f to its non-wandering set $\Omega(f)$ and the restriction of the rotation $R_{\rho(f)}$ to a closed subset of $\mathbb S^1$ . Thus, every non-wandering point of f is periodic and all the periodic points have the same period (say m). Moreover, $\mathbb S^1 \setminus \Omega(f)$ is a union of open intervals and each of these intervals is mapped onto itself by the iterate $f^m$ in a fixed-point free manner. In particular, in each of these intervals one has either $f^m(x) \lt x$ for every x or $f^m(x) \gt x$ for every x. So, the orbit by $f^m$ of any point of each of these open intervals converges to a periodic point of f with period m. (The proofs of the previous assertions may be found in [ Reference Nitecki26 ].) Thus,

\begin{align*}\mathcal M^{\mathrm{erg}}_f(\mathbb S^1) \,=\, \Big\{\frac1m \sum_{j=0}^{m-1}\delta_{f^j(x)} \colon \,f^m(x) = x\Big\}\end{align*}

and, similarly to the context of the interval, $\mathcal{E}_{\mathrm{top}}(f)({\varepsilon}) \,= \,\mathcal{O}({\varepsilon}^{-1})$ for every small ${\varepsilon}\gt 0$ . Thus the topological emergence of f is zero.

Finally, if $f \in \mathrm{Homeo}_+(\mathbb S^1)$ has irrational rotation number $\rho(f)$ then f is uniquely ergodic (cf. [ Reference Walters35 ]), so it has zero topological emergence. This completes the proof of the theorem.

Remark 2. It is known ([ Reference Poincaré30 ]) that there exists a $C^0-$ open and dense set of homeomorphisms $\mathfrak O \subset \mathrm{Homeo}_+(\mathbb S^1)$ such that every $f\in \mathfrak O$ has rational rotation number. The proof of Theorem 1 ensures that, for every $f\in \mathfrak O$ ,

\begin{align*}0 \, = \, \mathcal E_{\mathrm{top}}(f) \, = \, \sup\, \big\{\mathrm{dim}_B(\mu) \colon \, \mu \in \mathcal M^{\mathrm{erg}}_f(\mathbb S^1)\big\}.\end{align*}

In case $f\in \mathrm{Homeo}_+(\mathbb S^1)$ has irrational rotation number then its non-wandering set is either the whole circle or a minimal Cantor set $\Omega(f)$ . Moreover, given $0 \lt \tau \lt 1$ , there are examples of orientation preserving $C^{1+\tau}-$ diffeomorphisms of the circle with irrational rotation number and whose non-wandering set is a Cantor set of positive box dimension equal to $\tau$ (cf. [ Reference Kra and Schmeling22 , theorem 4·2]). For such a diffeomorphism f one has

\begin{align*}0 \, = \, \mathcal E_{\mathrm{top}}(f) \, \lt \, \sup\, \big\{\mathrm{dim}_B(\mu) \colon \, \mu \in \mathcal M^{\mathrm{erg}}_f(\mathbb S^1)\big\} \lt 1.\end{align*}

4. Proof of Theorem 2 $\mathrm{:}$ conservative setting

Let X be a compact smooth manifold with dimension at least two, d be a metric compatible with the smooth structure of X and $\mu$ be an $\mathbb{O}\mathbb{U}-$ probability measure on X. Denote by $\mathfrak R_s$ the $C^0-$ Baire generic subset of $\mathrm{Homeo}_\mu(X,d)$ formed by homeomorphisms which satisfy the specification property (cf. [ Reference Guihéneuf and Lefeuvre16 ]).

Recall from Subsection 2·2 that, given $\alpha \in \,\,]0,1[$ , a strictly decreasing sequence $({\varepsilon}_k)_{k \,\in \,\mathbb{N}}$ in the interval $\,]0,1[$ converging to zero, a bi-Lipschitz constant $L\gt 0$ for the charts of a finite atlas of M and $k \in \mathbb{N}$ , we denote by ${\mathcal O}_\mu({\varepsilon}_k, \alpha)$ the set of homeomorphisms $g \in \mathrm{Homeo}_\mu(X,d)$ such that g has a coherent $(\delta, L{\varepsilon}_k, q, \alpha)-$ pseudo-horseshoe, for some $\delta\gt 0$ , $q \in \mathbb{N}$ and $L\gt 0$ .

(The constant L depends only on the fixed atlas and will be fixed throughout.)

For every $K \in \mathbb{N}$ , define

\begin{align*}{\mathcal O}_{\mu, \, K}(\alpha) \,=\, \bigcup_{\substack{k \,\, \in \,\, \mathbb{N} \\ k \,\, \geqslant\,\, K}}\,{\mathcal O}_\mu({\varepsilon}_k, \alpha).\end{align*}

The set ${\mathcal O}_{\mu, \, K}(\alpha)$ is $C^0-$ open and dense in $\mathrm{Homeo}_\mu(X,d)$ (cf. [ Reference Guihéneuf15 ]). Thus the intersection

\begin{align*}\mathfrak{R}_\mu \,=\, \mathfrak{R}_s \; \cap \;\, \Bigg(\bigcap_{\alpha \,\in \,\,]0,1[\, \cap\, \mathbb Q} \,\, \bigcap_{K \,\in\, \mathbb{N}} \,{\mathcal O}_{\mu, \, K}(\alpha) \Bigg)\end{align*}

is $C^0-$ Baire generic in $\mathrm{Homeo}_\mu(X,d)$ .

Given $\alpha \in \,\,]0,1[\, \cap\, \mathbb Q$ and $K \in\mathbb N$ , any homeomorphism $g \in \mathfrak{R}_\mu$ has a coherent $(\delta, L{\varepsilon}_k, q, \alpha)-$ pseudo-horseshoe $\Lambda_k$ , for some $\delta\gt 0$ , $q \in \mathbb{N}$ , $L\gt 0$ and $k \geqslant K$ . Therefore (cf. [ Reference Carvalho, Rodrigues and Varandas7 , proposition 6·1]), there exists a finite subset $F_K \subset \mathcal M_g(X)$ formed by probability measures supported on $g-$ periodic orbits of period q which are $\varepsilon_k-$ apart from each other, and whose cardinality satisfies

\begin{align*}\# \,F_K \,\geqslant \,\left\lfloor\Big(\frac1{L{\varepsilon}_k}\Big)^{\alpha\,\mathrm{\dim} X}\right\rfloor.\end{align*}

Therefore, by Lemma 1, the upper metric order of $\mathcal M_g(X)$ is bigger or equal to $\mathrm{\dim} X$ , since

\begin{align*}\mathrm{mo}\,(\mathcal M_g(X), \,\mathrm W_p) \,\geqslant\, \alpha \, \mathrm{\dim} X\end{align*}

and $\alpha \in \,\,]0,1[\,\, \cap\, \mathbb Q$ is arbitrary. Moreover, the converse inequality

\begin{align*}\mathrm{mo}\,(\mathcal M_g(X), \, \mathrm W_p) \,\leqslant \, \mathrm{\dim} X\end{align*}

always holds (see (1·2)). So, $\mathrm{mo}\,(\mathcal M_g(X), \,\mathrm W_p) = \mathrm{\dim} X$ .

We are left to deduce from the previous equality that the topological emergence is maximal. As every $g \in \mathfrak R_\mu$ satisfies the specification property, the closure of the space $\mathcal M^{\mathrm{erg}}_g(X)$ is equal to $\mathcal M_g(X)$ (cf. Subsection 2·3). Thus,

\begin{align*}\mathrm{mo}\,(\mathcal M^{\mathrm{erg}}_g(X), \, \mathrm W_p) \,= \,\mathrm{mo}\,(\mathcal M_g(X), \,\mathrm W_p) \,=\, \mathrm{\dim} X\end{align*}

and similar equalities hold regarding the metric LP. This confirms that

\begin{align*}\limsup_{\varepsilon\,\to\,0^+}\,\frac{\log\;\log\mathcal E_{\mathrm{top}}(g)(\varepsilon)}{-\log\varepsilon}\, =\, \mathrm{\dim} X \quad \quad \forall\, g \in \mathfrak{R}_\mu\end{align*}

and the proof of Theorem 2 for $\mathrm{Homeo}_\mu(X,d)$ is complete.

Denote by $\mathrm{Per}\,f$ the set of periodic points of $f\colon X \to X$ . The previous proof has the following consequence:

Corollary 1. Under the assumptions of Theorem 2, if $f \in \mathfrak R_\mu$ then

\begin{align*}\mathcal E_{\mathrm{top}}(f_{|\overline{\mathrm{Per}\,f}}) \,=\, \mathrm{\dim} X.\end{align*}

5. Proof of Theorem 2 $\mathrm{:}$ non-conservative setting

The argument in the previous section also shows that

\begin{align*}\mathrm{mo}(\mathcal M_f(X), \, \mathrm W_p) \,=\, \mathrm{\dim} X \,=\, \mathrm{mo}(\mathcal M_f(X), \, \mathrm{LP}) \quad \quad \forall \, f \in \mathfrak{R}_0\end{align*}

where $\mathfrak{R}_0$ is the $C^0-$ generic subset of $\mathrm{Homeo}(X,d)$ defined in Proposition 1. However, the proof we presented for the conservative case does not entirely apply to $\mathrm{Homeo}(X,d)$ . Indeed, whereas a $C^0-$ generic homeomorphism in $\mathrm{Homeo}_\mu(X,d)$ is ergodic [ Reference Oxtoby and Ulam27 ], hence transitive, there exists a $C^0-$ open and dense set of homeomorphisms in $\mathrm{Homeo}(X,d)$ which display absorbing regions (cf. [ Reference Palis, Pugh, Shub and Sullivan28 , lemma 3·1] or [ Reference Hurley17 ]), and so those maps are not transitive. As transitivity is a necessary condition for the denseness of the ergodic probability measures in the space of invariant ones (cf. [ Reference Denker, Grillenberger and Sigmund11, Reference Kwietniak, Lacka and Oprocha21 ]), a typical homeomorphism in $\mathrm{Homeo}(X,d)$ does not satisfy the requirements needed to apply Lemma 1. Actually, such a strategy cannot even be pursued within a coherent pseudo-horseshoe, since an arbitrarily $C^0-$ small perturbation of these structures also allows us to create open trapping regions. Therefore we need to refine the construction of the set $\mathfrak{R}_0$ in order to ensure the existence of an adequate amount of ergodic probability measures at appropriate scales.

5.1. Topological horseshoes

We start by establishing a strengthened version of Proposition 1.

Proposition 2. Fix a strictly decreasing sequence $(\varepsilon_k)_{k \,\in\, \mathbb{N}}$ in the interval ]0,1[ such that $\lim_{k \, \to \, +\infty} \varepsilon_k = 0$ . For every $\alpha \in \,\,]0,1[$ and $k \in \mathbb{N}$ , there exists a $C^0-$ open subset $\widehat{\mathcal O}({\varepsilon}_k, \alpha)\subset \mathcal O({\varepsilon}_k, \alpha)$ such that:

  1. (i) given $K \in \mathbb{N}$ , the union

    \begin{align*}\widehat{\mathcal O}_K(\alpha)\, = \,\bigcup_{\substack{k \,\, \in \,\, \mathbb{N} \\ k \,\, \geqslant\,\, K}}\, \widehat{\mathcal O}({\varepsilon}_k, \alpha)\end{align*}
    is $C^0-$ dense in $\mathrm{Homeo}(X,d)$ ;
  2. (ii) there exists a constant $C\gt 0$ such that, if $h\in \widehat{\mathcal O}({\varepsilon}_k, \alpha)$ , then:

  • the map h has a coherent $(\delta,\,L{\varepsilon}_k,\,q,\,\alpha)-$ pseudo-horseshoe, for some $\delta\gt 0$ , $q \in \mathbb{N}$ and $L\gt 0$ ;

  • the map h has a collection of $\lfloor\Big(\frac1{{\varepsilon}_k}\Big)^{\alpha\, \mathrm{dim}\, X}\rfloor^q$ periodic orbits of period q whose supports are ${\varepsilon}^q_k-$ apart in the Hausdorff metric;

  • there exists a subset $E_h(X) \subset \mathcal M^{\mathrm{erg}}_h(X)$ whose cardinality is larger than

    \begin{align*}C \,\exp\left(\frac1C \Big\lfloor\Big(\frac1{{\varepsilon}_k}\Big)^{\alpha\, \mathrm{dim}\, X}\Big\rfloor^q\right)\end{align*}
    and such that any two distinct elements in $E_h(X)$ are $8^{-\frac1p} {\varepsilon}_k^{q}-$ separated in the $W_p$ distance.

Proof. We start with the construction of the $C^0-$ generic set $\mathfrak{R}_0$ described in Proposition 1. Then, given a homeomorphism $f \in \mathfrak{R}_0$ , to overcome the lack of specification within f we will make a small local $C^0-$ perturbation of f to obtain a homeomorphism g whose restriction to a fixed arbitrarily small open subset U of X is a $C^1-$ diffeomorphism and exhibits in U a horseshoe (that is, a closed invariant set restricted to which the dynamics is conjugate to a full shift on a finite alphabet), where the periodic specification property is valid. Clearly we cannot expect that this horseshoe persists under small $C^0-$ perturbations; but a well chosen finite number of its periodic points and the periodic orbits that shadow them may be turned permanent by a $C^0-$ small perturbation.

The first main difficulty of this argument is to adjust the size of the needed $C^0$ perturbations with the separation rates of the strips in the horseshoe, in order to be able to apply the combinatorial approach of [ Reference Berger and Bochi3 , theorem 1·6]. The second difficulty is to ensure that the ergodic probability measures supported on all of these orbits are distinct and sufficiently separated in the $W_p$ metric.

Let us briefly recall the reasoning to prove [ Reference Carvalho, Rodrigues and Varandas7 , proposition 7·1]. Given $\delta \gt 0$ , a homeomorphism of X can be arbitrarily $C^0-$ approximated by another homeomorphism, say f, which has both a $q-$ absorbing disk B with diameter smaller than $\delta$ , for some $q \in \mathbb{N}$ , and a $C^0-$ open neighbourhood $\mathcal{W}_f$ in $\mathrm{Homeo}(X,d)$ such that, for every $g \in \mathcal{W}_f$ , the disk B is still $q-$ absorbing for g. Then, by extra q arbitrarily small $C^0-$ perturbations, we get a homeomorphism $g \in \mathcal{W}_f$ exhibiting a coherent $(\delta,\,{\varepsilon}_k,\,q,\,\alpha)-$ pseudo-horseshoe in the finite union $\hat B$ of the domains $\big(f^j(B)\big)_{0\,\leqslant\, j\, \lt \, q}$ .

The previous construction is performed by an isotopy in $\hat B$ , so we may assume that the homeomorphism g is $C^1-$ smooth on the open domain $\hat B$ and that there exists an open subset

(5·1) \begin{equation}Q \,\subset\, \hat B\end{equation}

such that the maximal invariant set

\begin{align*}\Lambda \,=\, \bigcap_{n\,\in\, \mathbb Z} g^n(Q)\end{align*}

is a horseshoe, $g^q$ has a horseshoe with

\begin{align*}N = \Big\lfloor\Big(\frac1{{\varepsilon}_k}\Big)^{\alpha\, \mathrm{dim}\, X}\Big\rfloor^q\end{align*}

strips and the Hausdorff distance between any two such strips is bounded from below by ${\varepsilon}^q_k$ . Let $T = T({\varepsilon}_k^q/4) \in \mathbb{N}$ given by the specification property (cf. Subsection 2·3) for the map g restricted to $\Lambda$ . Take an even positive integer $\ell$ (depending on g and ${\varepsilon}_k$ ) satisfying

(5·2) \begin{equation}\quad q \ell \geqslant T\end{equation}

and such that the diameter of each connected component of $\bigcap_{|n|\,\leqslant\, \ell/2} g^n(Q)$ is strictly smaller than ${\varepsilon}_k^q$ .

Using the methods of [ Reference Daalderop and Fokkink10 ], one can perform a finite number of arbitrarily small $C^0-$ perturbations so that there is a $C^0-$ open neighbourhood of g where a fixed finite number of periodic orbits become permanent, that is, persist under small $C^0-$ perturbations of the dynamics. Therefore:

Lemma 2. There exists a $C^{0}$ -open neighbourhood ${\widehat{\mathcal{W}}}_{g} \subset \mathcal{W}_{g}$ of g in $\mathrm{Homeo}(X,d)$ such that every $h \in {\widehat{\mathcal{W}}}_{g}$ satisfies the following conditions:

  1. (a) the homeomorphism h has a coherent $(\delta,\,L{\varepsilon}_k,\,q,\,\alpha)-$ pseudo-horseshoe, for some $\delta\gt 0$ , $q \in \mathbb{N}$ and $L\gt 0$ ;

  2. (b) the homeomorphism h has a collection $\mathcal F_h$ of $N = \lfloor\Big(\frac1{{\varepsilon}_k}\Big)^{\alpha\, \mathrm{dim}\, X}\rfloor^q$ permanent periodic orbits of period q, and the Hausdorff distance between these orbits is bounded from below by ${\varepsilon}_k^q$ ;

  3. (c) the intersection $\bigcap_{n\,\in\, \mathbb Z} h^n(Q)$ is a pseudo-horseshoe, where Q is the open set satisfying the conditions that follow (5·1). Moreover, the diameter of each connected component of $\bigcap_{|n|\,\leqslant \,\ell/2} h^n(Q)$ is strictly smaller than ${\varepsilon}_k^q$ ;

  4. (d) assume that N is an even integer (otherwise, replace N by $2\lfloor N/2 \rfloor$ ). For any collection

    \begin{align*}\underline P \,=\, (P_1, \,P_2, \,\ldots, \,P_{\frac{N}{2}})\end{align*}
    of $N/2$ periodic orbits in ${\mathcal F}_h$ there is a periodic orbit $\wp = \wp(\underline P)$ with period $q\ell N/2 + T N/2$ which ${\varepsilon}_k^q/4-$ shadows the pseudo-orbit
    \begin{align*}\Big(\underbrace{(P_1,\, P_1,\, \cdots,\, P_1)}_{\ell},\, \underbrace{(P_2,\, P_2,\, \ldots, \,P_2)}_{\ell},\, \cdots, \,\underbrace{(P_{\frac{N}{2}},\, P_{\frac{N}{2}},\, \cdots,\, P_{\frac{N}{2}})}_{\ell}\Big)\end{align*}
    with a time lag of T iterates in between, that is,
    \begin{align*}\text{dist}_H\big(h^{\ell+(s-1) q}(P), \,h^{\ell+(s-1) q}(\wp(P))\big) \,\lt \, {\varepsilon}_k^q/4\end{align*}
    for every $0\leqslant \ell \leqslant q$ , $1\leqslant s \leqslant k$ and $1\leqslant t \leqslant L$ .

We define the subset $\widehat{\mathcal O}_K({\varepsilon}_k,\alpha)$ as the union of the previously obtained open domains $\widehat{\mathcal{W}}_g$ . By construction, this is a $C^0-$ open subset of $\mathrm{Homeo}(X,d)$ and, given $K \in \mathbb{N}$ , the union $\widehat{\mathcal O}_K(\alpha)\, = \,\bigcup_{\substack{k \,\, \in \,\, \mathbb{N} \\ k \,\, \geqslant\,\, K}}\, \widehat{\mathcal O}({\varepsilon}_k, \alpha)$ is $C^0-$ dense in $\mathrm{Homeo}(X,d)$ . We are left to prove that, if $h \in \widehat{\mathcal O}({\varepsilon}_k, \alpha)$ , then there exists a subset $E_h(X) \subset \mathcal M^{\mathrm{erg}}_h(X)$ with the properties listed in Proposition 2. For that we will apply the combinatorial estimates used in the proof of [ Reference Berger and Bochi3 , theorem 1·6].

According to [ Reference Berger and Bochi3 ], every maximal ${N}/4-$ separated set in the space

\begin{align*}F=\Big\{\beta \colon \,\{1,2, \ldots, N\} \,\to \,\{0,1\} \text{ such that } \sum_{i=1}^N \beta(i) = \frac{N}2\Big\}\end{align*}

endowed with the Hamming metric, has cardinality bounded from below by $D_1 e^{C_1 N}$ , for some uniform constants $D_1, C_1 \gt 0 $ . Given $h \in \widehat{\mathcal O}({\varepsilon}_k, \alpha)$ , fix a $N/4-$ maximal separated set $F'\subset F$ and consider the space $E_h(X)$ of ergodic probability measures defined by

\begin{align*}\mu_{\beta} \,=\, \frac1{q\ell N/2 + T N/2}\,\sum_{j=0}^{q\ell N/2 + T N/2 - 1} \,\beta(i_j)\,\delta_{h^j(\wp(\underline P_{\beta}))},\end{align*}

where $\beta \in F'$ , $\underline P_{\beta}\,=\,(P_{i_1},\, P_{i_2}, \ldots, P_{i_\frac{N}{2}})$ and $\beta(i_j) = 1$ for every $1 \leqslant j \leqslant N/2$ . Note that the cardinality of $E_h(X)$ coincides with the one of F’.

We claim that any two probability measures in $E_h(X)$ are $8^{-\frac1p} {\varepsilon}_k^{q}-$ separated in the metric $W_p$ . Firstly, observe that, if $\beta_1,\beta_2 \in F'$ are distinct, then

\begin{align*}\underline P_{\beta_1} \,=\, (P_{i_1},\,P_{i_2}, \cdots, P_{i_j},\cdots, P_{i_\frac{N}{2}})\,\, \neq \,\, \underline P_{\beta_2} \,=\, (P_{k_1},\,P_{k_2}, \cdots, P_{k_j}, \cdots P_{k_\frac{N}{2}})\end{align*}

and these two vectors differ in at least $N/4$ entries (that is, there are at least $N/4$ values of $1 \leqslant j \leqslant N/2$ such that $P_{i_j} \neq P_{k_j}$ ). Moreover, using (d) of Lemma 2, we conclude that, for any such values of j, one has

\begin{align*}\mathrm{dist}_H\Big(h^{t + (j-1) q \ell}(\wp(\underline P_{\beta_1})),\,\, h^{t +(j-1) q \ell}(\wp(\underline P_{\beta_2}))\Big) \,\gt \, {\varepsilon}_k^q/2 \quad \quad \forall \, 0\leqslant t \leqslant q \ell,\end{align*}

where $\mathrm{dist}_H$ stands for the Hausdorff distance defined in (2·1). Due to the choice of $\ell$ (see (5·2)), given $\pi\,\in\,\Pi(\mu_{\beta_1}, \mu_{\beta_2})$ one has

\begin{align*}\int_{X\times X}\,[d(x,y)]^p\;d\pi(x,y) & = \int_{\mathrm{supp } (\mu_{\beta_1})\times \mathrm{supp } (\mu_{\beta_2})}\,[d(x,y)]^p\;d\pi(x,y) \\[5pt] & \geqslant \frac{{\varepsilon}_k^{pq}}2\; \pi\Big( \big\{(x,y)\in X\times X \colon d(x,y) \,\gt \, \frac{{\varepsilon}_k^q}2\big\} \Big) \\[5pt] & \geqslant \frac{{\varepsilon}_k^{pq}}2\; \frac{q\ell N/4}{q\ell N/2 + T N/2}\\[5pt] & = \frac{{\varepsilon}_k^{pq}}4\; \frac{q\ell}{q\ell + T}\\[5pt] & \geqslant \frac{{\varepsilon}_k^{pq}}8.\end{align*}

Thus

\begin{align*}W_p(\mu_{\beta_1}, \mu_{\beta_2})\, =\, \inf_{\pi\,\in\,\Pi(\mu_{\beta_1}, \mu_{\beta_2})}\,\left(\int_{X\times X}\,[d(x,y)]^p\;d\pi(x,y)\right)^{1/p} \,\geqslant\, 8^{-\frac1p} {\varepsilon}_k^{q}.\end{align*}

This completes the proof of Proposition 2.

5.2. Estimate of the topological emergence

It is immediate to deduce from Proposition 2 that the set

(5·3) \begin{equation}\mathfrak{R} \, = \, \bigcap_{\alpha\, \in \,\,]0,1[ \,\cap\, \mathbb Q} \; \bigcap_{K \,\in \,\mathbb{N}} \; \bigcup_{\substack{k \,\, \in \,\, \mathbb{N} \\ k \,\, \geqslant\,\, K}}\, \widehat{\mathcal O}({\varepsilon}_k, \alpha)\end{equation}

is $C^0-$ Baire generic in $\mathrm{Homeo}(X,d)$ . We will show that

\begin{align*}\overline{\mathrm{mo}}\,(\mathcal{M}^{\mathrm{erg}}_f(X),\,\mathrm W_p) \,=\, \mathrm{dim} X \quad \quad \forall\, f \in \mathfrak{R}.\end{align*}

The estimates in the previous subsection show that, given $K \in \mathbb{N}$ , an integer $k \geqslant K$ and a rational number $\alpha\in \,\,]0,1[$ , there are $q_k \in \mathbb{N}$ and a set of cardinality

\begin{align*}D_1 \exp \Big(\lfloor\Big(\frac1{{\varepsilon}_k}\Big)^{\alpha\, \mathrm{dim}\, X}\rfloor^{q_k}\Big)\end{align*}

formed by ergodic probability measures which are $8^{-\frac1p} {\varepsilon}_k^{q_k}-$ separated in the Wasserstein metric $W_p$ . This implies that, for each small $\delta\gt 0$ , there exists $k_\delta\geqslant 1$ such that

\begin{align*}S_{\mathcal{M}^{\mathrm{erg}}_f(X)}(8^{-\frac1p}{\varepsilon}_{k}^{q_k}) {}\,\,\geqslant\,\, \exp (\exp ( -q_k\,\log \,({\varepsilon}_k)\, (\alpha\, \mathrm{dim}\, X-\delta) ))\end{align*}

for every $k\geqslant k_\delta$ . Therefore,

\begin{align*}\frac{\log\log S_{\mathcal{M}^{\mathrm{erg}}_f(X)}(8^{-\frac1p}{\varepsilon}_{k}^{q_k})}{-\log \,(8^{-\frac1p}{\varepsilon}_{k}^{q_k})} \, {}\,\geqslant\,\, {} \frac{ -q_k\,\log \,({\varepsilon}_k)\, (\alpha\, \mathrm{dim}\, X-\delta) }{-{q_k}\log ({\varepsilon}_{k}) - \log (8^{-\frac1p})}. {}\end{align*}

Consequently, taking $\limsup$ as k goes to $+ \infty$ , we get

\begin{align*}\overline{\mathrm{mo}}\,(\mathcal{M}^{\mathrm{erg}}_f(X),\,\mathrm W_p)\,\,\geqslant\,\, \alpha\, \mathrm{dim}\, X-\delta.\end{align*}

As $\delta$ and $\alpha$ can be chosen arbitrarily close to 0 and 1, respectively, we conclude that

\begin{align*}\overline{\mathrm{mo}}\,(\mathcal{M}^{\mathrm{erg}}_f(X),\,\mathrm W_p) \,\,=\,\, \mathrm{dim}\, X\end{align*}

as claimed. The proof of Theorem 2 is complete.

5.3. Pseudo-physical measures

Assume that the manifold X is endowed with a volume reference measure, which we call Lebesgue measure. Given $\mu \in \mathcal M_f(X)$ , denote by $\mathcal{L}_\omega(x,f)$ the set of accumulation points in the weak $^*-$ topology of the sequence $\big(\mathrm{e}^f_n(x)\big)_{n \,\in\, \mathbb N}$ of $n{\text{th}}-$ empirical measures associated to x by f. The measure $\mu$ is called physical if the set of those $x \in X$ for which $\mathcal{L}_\omega(x,f) = \{\mu\}$ has positive Lebesgue measure in X. Recall from [ Reference Catsigeras and Enrich8 ] that $\mu \in \mathcal M_f(X)$ is said to be pseudo-physical if, for every ${\varepsilon} \gt 0$ , the set

\begin{align*}A_{\varepsilon}(\mu) \,=\, \big\{x \in X \colon \,\mathrm{dist}(\mu, \nu) \,\lt \, {\varepsilon} \quad \forall\, \nu \in \,\mathcal{L}_\omega(x, f)\big\}\end{align*}

has positive Lebesgue measure, where dist stands for any distance inducing in $\mathcal M(X)$ the weak $^*-$ topology.

Remark 3. It was proved in [ Reference Kiriki, Nakano and Soma19 , proposition 1·2] that, if X is an infinite compact metric space and $f \colon X \to X$ is a continuous map with the specification property, then there is a residual subset Y of X such that

\begin{align*}\mathrm{\overline{dim}_B}\, \big(\mathcal{L}_\omega(x,f)\big) = +\infty \quad \quad \forall \, x \in Y.\end{align*}

When $\mu$ is a $\mathbb{O}\mathbb{U}-$ probability measure, as the specification property is $C^0-$ generic in $\mathrm{Homeo}_\mu(X,d)$ so is the previous equality.

Let $\mathcal O_f(X)$ be the set of pseudo-physical measures of f and $\mathcal M^{\mathrm{per}}_f(X)$ be the set of periodic Dirac measures of f. It is known (cf. [ Reference Catsigeras and Troubetzkoy9 , theorem 1]) that, for a $C^0-$ generic f in $\mathrm{Homeo}(X,d)$ , one has

\begin{align*}\overline{\mathcal M^{\mathrm{erg}}_f}(X) \,=\, \overline{\mathcal M^{\mathrm{per}}_f}(X) \,=\, \mathcal O_f(X),\end{align*}

where the closures are taken in the weak $^*-$ topology. Moreover, for a $C^0-$ generic f in $\mathrm{Homeo}(X,d)$ , the set $\mathcal O_f(X)$ has empty interior in $\mathcal M_f(X)$ , so $\mathcal M_f(X) \setminus \mathcal O_f(X)$ is an open dense subset of $\mathcal M_f(X)$ which does not intersect $\overline{\mathcal M^{\mathrm{erg}}_f}(X)$ (cf. [ Reference Catsigeras and Troubetzkoy9 , theorem 2]). Therefore, in spite of $\mathcal O_f(X)$ being meager,

\begin{align*}\overline{\mathrm{mo}}\,(\mathcal M^{\mathrm{erg}}_f(X), \, \mathrm W_p) \,= \,\overline{\mathrm{mo}}\,(\mathcal O_f(X), \, \mathrm W_p)\end{align*}

and similarly regarding the metric LP. Hence, from Theorem 2 we conclude that:

Corollary 2. For a $C^0-$ generic f in $\mathrm{Homeo}(X,d)$ one has

\begin{align*}\overline{\mathrm{mo}}\,(\mathcal O_f(X), \, \mathrm W_p) \,=\, \mathrm{\dim} X.\end{align*}

6. Proof of Theorem 4

The content of this section is inspired by the intermediate value property of the upper box dimension of bounded subsets of the Euclidean space $\mathbb R^\ell$ , $\ell \in \mathbb{N}$ , proved in [ Reference Feng, Wen and Wu13 , theorem 2].

Let (Z, d) be a compact metric space and fix an arbitrary $0 \leqslant \beta \leqslant \mathrm{\overline{mo}}\,(Z)$ .

If $\beta=0$ , we take $Y_\beta = \{z\}$ for any $z\in Z$ ; if, otherwise, $\beta = \mathrm{\overline{mo}}\,(Z)$ , we just consider $Y_\beta = Z$ .

Now we assume that $\beta \in \,\,]\,0, \,\mathrm{\overline{mo}}\,(Z)\,[$ . We start by showing that, in order to evaluate the upper metric order of Y, which is given by the limit

\begin{align*} \overline{\mathrm{mo}}\,(Y) \, = \, \limsup_{\varepsilon\,\to\, 0^+}\,\frac{\log\log S_Y(\varepsilon)}{-\log \varepsilon}\end{align*}

we may use balls of radius $\lambda^j$ , for $j \in \mathbb{N}$ and any choice of $0 \lt \lambda \lt 1$ . More precisely:

Lemma 3. Given $\lambda \in \,\,]0,1[$ , for every subset Y of Z one has

\begin{align*}\mathrm{\overline{mo}}\,(Y) \,= \,\limsup_{j\,\to\,+\infty} \,\frac{\log\log S_Y(\lambda^{j})}{-\log \lambda^{j}}.\end{align*}

Proof. Given $\lambda \in \,\,]0,1[$ and ${\varepsilon} \gt 0$ , there is a positive integer j such that $\lambda^{j+1} \lt {\varepsilon} \leqslant \lambda^{j}$ . Then, as $S_Y(\lambda^{j}) \,\leqslant \, S_Y({\varepsilon}) \, \leqslant \, S_Y(\lambda^{j+1})$ we conclude that

\begin{align*}\frac{\log\log S_Y(\lambda^{j+1})}{-\log \lambda^{j+1}} \geqslant \frac{\log\log S_Y(\varepsilon)}{-\log \varepsilon} {}\geqslant \frac{\log\log S_Y(\lambda^{j})}{-\log \lambda^{j}}.\end{align*}

Consequently,

\begin{eqnarray*} \limsup_{\varepsilon\,\to\, 0^+}\,\frac{\log\log S_Y(\varepsilon)}{-\log \varepsilon} {}= \limsup_{j\,\to\,+\infty}\, \frac{\log\log S_Y(\lambda^{j})}{-\log \lambda^{j}}.\end{eqnarray*}

This completes the proof of Lemma 3.

Let us resume the proof of the theorem when $0 \lt \beta \lt \overline{\mathrm{mo}}\,(Z)$ . We start by choosing $\lambda \in \,\,]0,\frac12[$ . By compactness of Z, for each $k \in \mathbb{N}$ there is a finite open covering $\mathcal U_k$ of Z by balls of radius $\lambda^k$ whose corresponding balls of radius $\lambda^{k+1}$ are pairwise disjoint. In particular, there exists a partition $\mathcal P_k$ of Z made up of elements whose diameter is bounded by $\lambda^k$ and whose inner diameter is bounded from below by $\lambda^{k+1}$ .

As $\mathrm{\overline{mo}}\,(Z) \gt \beta$ , there are infinitely many positive integers k such that $S_Z(\lambda^{k-1})$ is bigger than $\lfloor \exp(\lambda^{-\beta {k}}) \rfloor.$ Let $k_1 \in \mathbb{N}$ be the smallest of them, which satisfies

(6·1) \begin{equation}S_Z(\lambda^{k_1-1}) \gt \lfloor \exp(\lambda^{-\beta {k_1}}) \rfloor.\end{equation}

As the diameter of the elements of the partition $\mathcal P_{k_1}$ is smaller than $\lambda^{k_1}$ and $0\lt \lambda\lt 1/2$ , we are sure that any two $\lambda^{k_1-1}-$ separated points belong to different elements of the partition $\mathcal P_{k_1}$ . Therefore, there exist at least $\lfloor \exp(\lambda^{-\beta {k_1}}) \rfloor$ elements of the partition ${\mathcal{P}}_{k_1}$ which intersect Z. Moreover, since the upper metric order is finitely stable (cf. [ Reference Berger and Bochi3 ]), that is, for any collection $\{B_j\}_{1\,\leqslant\, j \,\leqslant\, n}$ of subsets of Z one has

\begin{align*}\mathrm{\overline{mo}}\,(\bigcup_{1\,\leqslant\, j\, \leqslant\, n} B_j) \,= \,\max_{1\,\leqslant\, j\, \leqslant\, n} \overline{\mathrm{mo}}\,(B_j)\end{align*}

then there exists a partition element $E_{k_1} \in \mathcal P_{k_1}$ such that

(6·2) \begin{equation} \overline{\mathrm{mo}}\,(E_{k_1})\,=\,\overline{\mathrm{mo}}\,(Z).\end{equation}

Select a finite sample of points

\begin{align*}\widehat{Y}_{k_1} \,=\,\Big\{x_{1,i} \colon \,1\leqslant i \leqslant \lfloor \exp(\lambda^{-\beta k_1}) \rfloor\Big\}\subset Z\end{align*}

which belong to different elements of the partition $\mathcal P_{k_1} \setminus \{E_{k_1}\}$ . Afterwards, take the set

\begin{align*}Y_{1} \,=\, \widehat{Y}_{k_1} \; \cup \; E_{k_1}.\end{align*}

By construction, the equality (6·2) and the finite stability of the upper metric order, one has:

  1. (i) $\quad \mathrm{\overline{mo}}\,(Y_{1})\,=\,\overline{\mathrm{mo}}\,(Z)$ ;

  2. (ii) $\quad \#\{E\in {\mathcal{P}}_{k_1}\colon \, E\cap Y_{1} \neq \emptyset \}\,=\,\lfloor \exp(\lambda^{-\beta k_1}) \rfloor+1$ ;

  3. (iii) $\quad \#\{E\in {\mathcal{P}}_{k}\colon \,E\cap Y_1 \neq \emptyset \}\,\leqslant \,\lfloor \exp(\lambda^{-\beta k}) \rfloor$ for every $1 \leqslant k \lt k_1$ .

The last item, (iii), is due to the choice of $k_1$ as the smallest value of all positive integers k satisfying the inequality (6·1).

By (i), one can take the smallest integer $k_2 \gt k_1$ such that

\begin{align*}S_{Y_1}(\lambda^{k_2-1}) \gt \lfloor \exp(\lambda^{-\beta {k_2}} \rfloor\end{align*}

and so there are at least $\lfloor \exp(\lambda^{-\beta {k_2}}) \rfloor$ elements of the partition ${\mathcal{P}}_{k_2}$ which intersect $Y_1$ . Thus, there exists $E_{k_2}\in {\mathcal{P}}_{k_2}$ such that

\begin{align*}\overline{\mathrm{mo}}\,(E_{k_2})\,=\,\overline{\mathrm{mo}}\,(Z).\end{align*}

Again, take a finite collection of points

\begin{align*}\widehat{Y}_{k_2}\,=\, \Big\{x_{2,i} \colon\, 1\leqslant i \leqslant \lfloor \exp(\lambda^{-\beta k_2}) \rfloor\Big\} \subset Y_1\end{align*}

belonging to different elements of the partition $\mathcal P_{k_2} \setminus \{E_{k_2}\}$ . Afterwards, consider the set

\begin{align*}Y_{2} \,=\, \widehat{Y}_{k_1} \; \cup \; E_{k_2}\end{align*}

which satisfies:

  1. (iv) $\quad \mathrm{\overline{mo}}\,(Y_{2})\,=\,\overline{\mathrm{mo}}\,(Z)$ ;

  2. (v) $\quad \#\{E\in {\mathcal{P}}_{k_2}\colon \,E\cap Y_{2} \neq \emptyset \}\, =\, \lfloor \exp(\lambda^{-\beta k_2}) \rfloor+1$ ;

  3. (vi) $\quad \#\{E\in {\mathcal{P}}_{k}\colon \,E\cap Y_{2} \neq \emptyset \}\,\leqslant\, \lfloor \exp(\lambda^{-\beta k}) \rfloor \quad$ for every $k_1 \lt k \lt k_2$ .

Proceeding recursively, one constructs a nested sequence of sets

\begin{align*}Y_{n+1} \,\subset\, Y_n \,\subset\, \cdots \,\subset\, Y_2 \,\subset\, Y_1 \,\subset Z\end{align*}

whose upper metric orders coincide with $\overline{\mathrm{mo}}\,(Z)$ and, moreover, such that

(6·3) \begin{equation}\#\{E\in {\mathcal{P}}_{k_n}\colon \, E\cap Y_{n} \neq \emptyset \}\,=\,\lfloor \exp(\lambda^{-\beta k_n}) \rfloor + 1\end{equation}

and

(6·4) \begin{equation}\#\{E\in {\mathcal{P}}_{k}\colon \, E\cap Y_{n} \neq \emptyset \}\,\leqslant\, \lfloor \exp(\lambda^{-\beta k}) \rfloor \quad \forall \,k_{n-1} \lt k \lt k_n.\end{equation}

In particular, bringing together equations (6·3) and (6·4), and the fact that the inner diameter of $\mathcal P_k$ is bounded from below by $\lambda^{k+1}$ , we conclude that the subset of Z defined by

\begin{align*}Y_\beta \,=\, \bigcap_{n\,\in \, \mathbb{N}}\, Y_n\end{align*}

has upper metric order $\mathrm{\overline{mo}}\,(Y_{\beta}) = \beta$ . The proof of the theorem is complete.

7. Proof of Theorem 3

Let (X, d) be a compact metric space and denote by $\mathcal M_1(\mathcal{M}_1(X))$ the space of probability measures, defined on the Borel subsets of the space $\mathcal{M}(X)$ , endowed with a metric D which induces the weak $^*-$ topology. Given ${\varepsilon} \gt 0$ and a probability measure $\eta \in \mathcal M_1(\mathcal{M}_1(X))$ , the quantisation number of $\eta$ at scale ${\varepsilon} \gt 0$ , denoted by $Q_\eta({\varepsilon})$ , is the least integer $N \in \mathbb{N}$ such that there exists a probability measure $\zeta \in \mathcal M_1(\mathcal{M}_1(X))$ supported on a set of cardinality N and satisfying $D(\eta,\,\zeta) \leqslant {\varepsilon}$ . By [ Reference Berger and Bochi3 , proposition 3·2], the quantization number $Q_\eta(\varepsilon)$ for the $1-$ Wasserstein metric $W_1$ is the minimal cardinality N of any set

\begin{align*}F \,=\, \big\{\theta_1,\ldots, \theta_N\big\}\, \subset \,\mathcal{M}_1(X)\end{align*}

such that

\begin{align*}\int_{\mathcal{M}_1(X)} \,\, W_1(\theta,\,F) \; d\eta(\theta) \,\leqslant\, {\varepsilon}.\end{align*}

We refer the reader to [ Reference Graf and Luschgy14 ] for more details regarding this notion which aims at evaluating how close, in the Wasserstein or LP metric, is each $\eta-$ almost every $\theta \in \mathcal{M}_1(X)$ to measures with finite support.

Given a continuous map $f\colon X \to X$ , ${\varepsilon}\gt 0$ and $\mu \in \mathcal{M}_f(X)$ , one has (cf. [ Reference Berger and Bochi3 , proposition 3·12])

(7·1) \begin{equation}\mathcal{E}_\mu(f)(\varepsilon)\,\,=\,\,Q_{\widehat{\mu}}(\varepsilon),\end{equation}

where $\widehat{\mu} \in \mathcal M_1(\mathcal{M}_f(X))$ is the ergodic decomposition of $\mu$ and $Q_{\widehat{\mu}}({\varepsilon})$ is the quantization number of $\widehat{\mu}$ for the metric $W_1$ on $\mathcal{M}_1(X)$ . This characterisation of the metric emergence map will be a crucial ingredient in the proof of Theorem 3.

We start by establishing a connection between the metric emergence maps of two $f-$ invariant probability measures with the corresponding emergence map of a convex combination of them.

Lemma 4. Given $\mu, \nu \in \mathcal{M}_f(X)$ , let $\tau_t = t\mu + (1-t)\nu$ be a convex combination of $\mu$ and $\nu$ for some $t \in \,\,]0,1[$ . Then

\begin{align*}\max \Big\{Q_{\widehat{\mu}}\left(\frac{{\varepsilon}}{t}\right),\,Q_{\widehat{\nu}}\left(\frac{{\varepsilon}}{1-t}\right)\Big\} \, \leqslant\, Q_{\widehat{\tau_t}}({\varepsilon}) \,\leqslant\, 2 \max \Big\{Q_{\widehat{\mu}}({\varepsilon}),\,Q_{\widehat{\nu}}({\varepsilon})\Big\}.\end{align*}

Proof. Consider $\mu, \nu \in \mathcal{M}_f(X)$ and $\tau_t = t\mu + (1-t)\nu$ for some $t \in \,\,]0,1[$ . Fix $\varepsilon\gt 0$ and let $F\subset \mathcal{M}_1(X)$ be a finite subset such that

(7·2) \begin{equation}\int_{\mathcal{M}_1(X)}\,\,W_1(\theta,F)\,d\widehat{\tau_t}(\theta) \,\,\leqslant\,\, \varepsilon.\end{equation}

By the ergodic decomposition theorem, the probability measures $\widehat{\mu}$ and $\widehat{\nu}$ in $\mathcal M_1(\mathcal M_f(X))$ satisfy

\begin{align*}\mu \,=\, \int_{\mathcal{M}_f^{\mathrm{erg}}(X)} \,\delta_\theta \; d\widehat{\mu}(\theta) \quad \quad \text{ and } \quad \quad \nu \,=\, \int_{\mathcal{M}_f^{\mathrm{erg}}(X)} \,\delta_\theta\; d\widehat{\nu} (\theta),\end{align*}

where $\mathcal{M}_f^{\mathrm{erg}}(X)$ stands for the space of extremes of the convex set $\mathcal M_f(X)$ . Or, equivalently,

\begin{align*}\int_X \varphi\; d\mu \,=\, \int_{\mathcal{M}_f^{\mathrm{erg}}(X)} \Big(\int_X \varphi \; d\theta \Big) \; d\widehat{\mu}(\theta) \quad \text{ and } \quad \int_X \varphi\; d\nu \,=\, \int_{\mathcal{M}_f^{\mathrm{erg}}(X)} \Big(\int_X \varphi \; d\theta \Big) \; d\widehat{\nu}(\theta)\end{align*}

for every continuous function $\varphi\colon X\to\mathbb R$ . Therefore, the probability measure $\widehat{\tau_t}$ on $\mathcal M_1(\mathcal M_f(X))$ satisfies

\begin{align*}\widehat{\tau_t} \,=\,t\widehat{\mu} \, + \,(1-t)\widehat{\nu}\end{align*}

and so

(7·3) \begin{align}\int_{\mathcal{M}_1(X)}\,\, & W_1(\theta,F)\,d\widehat{\tau}_t(\theta) \nonumber \\[5pt] & = t\int_{\mathcal{M}_1(X)}\,\,W_1(\theta,F)\,d\widehat{\mu}(\theta)\,+\, (1-t)\int_{\mathcal{M}_1(X)}\,\,W_1(\theta,F)\,d\widehat{\nu}(\theta). \end{align}

This equality together with (7·2) and the fact the three integrands above are non-negative imply that

\begin{align*}\int_{\mathcal{M}_1(X)} \,\,W_1(\theta,F)\,d\widehat{\mu}(\theta)\,\leqslant\, \frac{\varepsilon}{t} \quad \quad \text{ and } \quad \quad \int_{\mathcal{M}_1(X)}\,\,W_1(\theta,F)\,d\widehat{\nu}(\theta) \,\leqslant \,\frac{\varepsilon}{1-t}\end{align*}

which ultimately yields to

(7·4) \begin{equation}\max \left\{Q_{\widehat{\mu}}\left(\frac{\varepsilon}{t}\right),\,Q_{\widehat{\nu}}\left(\frac{\varepsilon}{1-t}\right)\right\} \, {}\leqslant \,Q_{\widehat{\tau_t}}(\varepsilon).\end{equation}

Regarding the second inequality in the statement of Lemma 4, we notice that if, for $\varepsilon\gt 0$ , the sets $F_1\subset \mathcal{M}_1(X)$ and $F_2\subset \mathcal{M}_1(X)$ are finite with minimal cardinality such that

\begin{align*}\int_{\mathcal{M}_1(X)}\,\,W_1(\theta,F_1)\,d\widehat{\mu}(\theta)\,\leqslant\,\varepsilon \quad \quad \text{ and } \quad \quad \int_{\mathcal{M}_1(X)}\,\,W_1(\theta,F_2)\,d\widehat{\nu}(\theta)\,\leqslant\,\varepsilon\end{align*}

then, by (7·3), the union $F = F_1 \cup F_2$ satisfies

\begin{align*}\int_{\mathcal{M}_1(X)}\,\,W_1(\theta,F)\,d\widehat{\tau_t}(\theta)\,\leqslant\,\varepsilon.\end{align*}

Since $\# F\leqslant 2\,\max \{\# F_1,\# F_2\}$ , we deduce that

\begin{equation*}Q_{\widehat{\tau_t}}(\varepsilon)\,\leqslant\, 2 \,\max \Big\{Q_{\widehat{\mu}}(\varepsilon),\,Q_{\widehat{\nu}}(\varepsilon)\Big\}.\end{equation*}

We now resume the proof of Theorem 3.

  1. (a) Recall that

    \begin{align*}\mathcal{B}_f(X) \, = \, \big\{\mu \in \mathcal M_f(X) \colon \, \sup_{{\varepsilon} \gt 0} \,\mathcal{E}_\mu(f)({\varepsilon}) \gt 1 \big\}\end{align*}
    and note that, in $\mathcal{B}_f(X)$ , the limit (1·4) that estimates the metric emergence is well defined. Moreover, since the metric emergence map
    \begin{align*}{\varepsilon} \gt 0 \quad \quad \mapsto \quad \quad \mathcal{E}_\mu(f)({\varepsilon})\end{align*}
    is decreasing, one has
    (7·5) \begin{eqnarray}\sup_{{\varepsilon} \gt 0} \,\mathcal{E}_\mu(f)({\varepsilon}) \gt 1 &\quad \Leftrightarrow \quad& \exists \, {\varepsilon}_\mu \gt 0 \colon \quad \mathcal{E}_\mu(f)({\varepsilon}_\mu) \gt 1 \nonumber \\[5pt] &\quad \Leftrightarrow \quad & \exists \, {\varepsilon}_\mu \gt 0 \colon \quad \mathcal{E}_\mu(f)({\varepsilon}) \gt 1\quad \forall\, 0 \lt {\varepsilon} \leqslant {\varepsilon}_\mu.\end{eqnarray}

Consider $\mu, \, \nu \in \mathcal{B}_f(X)$ , that is, $f-$ invariant probability measures such that

\begin{align*}\sup_{{\varepsilon} \gt 0} \,\mathcal{E}_\mu(f)({\varepsilon}) \gt 1 \quad \quad \text{ and } \quad \quad \sup_{{\varepsilon} \gt 0} \,\mathcal{E}_\nu(f)({\varepsilon}) \gt 1.\end{align*}

Let ${\varepsilon}_\mu \gt 0$ and ${\varepsilon}_\nu \gt 0$ as in (7·5). Given $0 \lt t \lt 1$ , take

\begin{align*}{\varepsilon}_0 \,=\, \min \big\{t{\varepsilon}_\mu, \,(1-t){\varepsilon}_\nu\big\} \gt 0.\end{align*}

Thus, ${{\varepsilon}_0}/{t} \leqslant {\varepsilon}_\mu$ and ${{\varepsilon}_0}/{1-t} \leqslant {\varepsilon}_\nu$ . By Lemma 4, if $\tau_t = t\mu + (1-t)\nu$ then

(7·6) \begin{eqnarray}Q_{\widehat{\tau_t}}({\varepsilon}_0) & \,\geqslant\, & \max \left\{Q_{\widehat{\mu}}\left(\frac{{\varepsilon}_0}{t}\right),\,Q_{\widehat{\nu}}\left(\frac{{\varepsilon}_0}{1-t}\right)\right\} \nonumber \\[5pt] & \,\geqslant \, & \max \Big\{Q_{\widehat{\mu}}({\varepsilon}_\mu),\,Q_{\widehat{\nu}}({\varepsilon}_\nu)\Big\} \, \gt \, 1.\end{eqnarray}

That is, $\mathcal{E}_{\tau_t}({\varepsilon}_0) \gt 1$ , hence $\tau_t$ belongs to $\mathcal{B}_f(X)$ .

  1. (b) Now we will show that, if $\mathcal{B}_f(X)$ is nonempty, then the metric emergence map is quasi-convex on $\mathcal{B}_f(X)$ . Given $t \in \,\,]0,1[$ and $\mu,\nu \in \mathcal{B}_f(X)$ , consider the convex combination $\tau_t = t\mu + (1-t)\nu$ . We claim that

    (7·7) \begin{equation}\mathcal{E}_{t\mu\,+\,(1-t)\nu}(f) \,=\,\max \big\{\mathcal{E}_\mu(f), \,\mathcal{E}_\nu(f) \big\}.\end{equation}
    Indeed, as a consequence of (a), (7·4) and (7·1), we obtain
    \begin{eqnarray*}\mathcal{E}_{t\mu \,+\, (1-t)\nu}(f) & \,=\, & \limsup_{{\varepsilon} \, \to \, 0^+} \, \frac{\log \log Q_{\widehat{\tau_t}}({\varepsilon})}{-\log {\varepsilon}} \\[5pt] & \,\geqslant\, & \limsup_{{\varepsilon} \, \to \, 0^+} \, \frac{\log \log Q_{\widehat{\mu}}\left(\frac{{\varepsilon}}{t}\right)}{-\log \frac{\varepsilon}{t} - \log t}\\[5pt] &\,=\,& \mathcal{E}_\mu(f).\end{eqnarray*}
    A similar estimate yields $\mathcal{E}_{t\mu \,+\, (1-t)\nu}(f) \geqslant \mathcal{E}_\nu(f)$ . Hence,
    (7·8) \begin{equation}\mathcal{E}_{t\mu\,+\,(1-t)\nu}(f) \,\geqslant \,\max\{\mathcal{E}_\mu(f),\, \mathcal{E}_\nu(f) \}.\end{equation}

Conversely, by Lemma 4, one has

\begin{align*}Q_{\widehat{\tau_t}}(\varepsilon) \,\leqslant\, 2 \max \, \big\{Q_{\widehat{\mu}}(\varepsilon),\,Q_{\widehat{\nu}}(\varepsilon)\big\}\end{align*}

which, by (7·1), implies

(7·9) \begin{equation}\mathcal{E}_{t\mu\,+\,(1-t)\nu}(f) \,\leqslant \,\max\{\mathcal{E}_\mu(f),\, \mathcal{E}_\nu(f) \}.\end{equation}

Bringing together (7·8) and (7·9), we get

\begin{align*}\mathcal{E}_{t\mu\,+\,(1-t)\nu}(f) \,=\,\max\{\mathcal{E}_\mu(f), \mathcal{E}_\nu(f) \}.\end{align*}

We observe that we have also shown that, in general, the metric emergence is not affine.

  1. (c) Take $\beta \in [0, \, \mathcal{E}_{\mathrm{top}}(f)]$ . The following argument is inspired by the proof of [ Reference Berger and Bochi3 , theorem E], where the case $\beta = \mathcal{E}_{\mathrm{top}}(f)$ was addressed.

Assume that $\mathcal{E}_{\mathrm{top}}(f) \gt 0$ and fix $\beta \in [0, \, \mathcal{E}_{\mathrm{top}}(f)[$ . By Theorem 4 applied to $Z = \mathcal{M}^{\mathrm{erg}}_f(X)$ , whose upper metric order $\mathrm{\overline{mo}}\,(Z)$ is precisely $\mathcal{E}_{\mathrm{top}}(f)$ , there exists a subset $Y_\beta \subset Z$ such that $\mathrm{\overline{mo}}\,(Y_\beta) = \beta$ . Therefore, by [ Reference Berger and Bochi3 , theorem 3·9] we may find a probability measure $\nu \in {\mathcal M}_1(\mathcal{M}^{\mathrm{erg}}_f(X))$ such that $\overline{q_0}(\nu) = \mathrm{\overline{mo}}\,(Y_\beta)$ , where $\overline{q_0}$ stands for the quantisation of $\nu$ . Then the probability measure $\mu = \int_{\mathcal{M}_1(X)}\,\eta \, d\nu(\eta)$ is $f-$ invariant, so we may apply [ Reference Berger and Bochi3 , proposition 3·12] to $\mu$ and thus conclude that

\begin{align*}\mathcal{E}_\mu(f) \,=\, \limsup_{{\varepsilon} \, \to \, 0^+} \, \frac{\log \log \mathcal{E}_\mu(f)({\varepsilon})}{-\log {\varepsilon}} \,=\, \overline{q_0}(\nu) \,=\, \mathrm{\overline{mo}}\,(Y_\beta) \,=\, \beta.\end{align*}

This proves (c) and completes the proof of Theorem 3.

Acknowledgments

We are grateful to the anonymous referee for the valuable questions and comments which helped us to improve this manuscript. The authors also thank J. Fraser and N. Jurga for bringing to their attention useful references on Dimension Theory. MC and PV were partially supported by CMUP, member of LASI, which is financed by national funds through FCT - Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia, I.P., under the projects with references UIDB/00144/2020 and UIDP/00144/2020. MC and PV also acknowledge financial support from the project PTDC/MAT-PUR/4048/2021. PV benefits from the grant CEECIND/03721/2017 of the Stimulus of Scientific Employment, Individual Support 2017 Call, awarded by FCT. This work was initiated during the visit of FR to CMUP, whose hospitality is gratefully acknowledged.

References

Akin, E.. Stretching the Oxtoby–Ulam theorem. Colloq. Math. 84/85 (1) (2000), 83–94.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Berger, P.. Emergence and non-typicality of the finiteness of the attractors in many topologies. Proc. Steklov Inst. Math. 297 (1) (2017), 1–27.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Berger, P. and Bochi, J.. On emergence and complexity of ergodic decompositions. Adv. Math. 390 (197904) (2021), 52 pp.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Billingsley, P.. Convergence of Probability Measures Wiley Series in Probability and Statistics (John Wiley and Sons, New York, 2nd edition, 1999).Google Scholar
Bochi, J.. Topological emergence. Talk at the Zoominar in Dynamical Systems, University of Porto, https://sites.google.com/view/dynsys-zoominar/home 2021.Google Scholar
Bowen, R.. Periodic points and measures for Axiom A diffeomorphisms. Trans. Amer. Math. Soc. 154 (1971), 377397.Google Scholar
Carvalho, M., Rodrigues, F. B. and Varandas, P.. Generic homeomorphisms have full metric mean dimension. Ergodic Theory Dynam. Systems 142 (2020), 125.Google Scholar
Catsigeras, E. and Enrich, H.. SRB-like measures for $C^0$ dynamics. Acad. Sci. Math. 59 (2) (2011), 151164.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Catsigeras, E. and Troubetzkoy, S.. Invariant measures for typical continuous maps on manifolds. Nonlinearity 32 (10) (2019), 39814001.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Daalderop, F. and Fokkink, R.. Chaotic homeomorphisms are generic. Topol. Appl. 102 (2000), 297302.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Denker, M., Grillenberger, C. and Sigmund, K.. Ergodic theory on compact spaces. Lecture Notes in Mathematics vol. 527, (Springer-Verlag, Berlin-New York, 1976).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Falconer, K.. Fractal Geometry. Mathematical Foundations and Applications., (John Wiley & Sons, New York, 2nd edition, 2003).Google Scholar
Feng, D., Wen, Z. and Wu, J.. Some remarks on the box-counting dimensions. Progr. Natur. Sci. (English Ed.) 9 (6) (1999), 409–415.Google Scholar
Graf, S. and Luschgy, H.. Foundations of quantization for probability distributions. Lecture Notes in Mathematics vol. 1730 (Springer-Verlag, Berlin, 2000).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Guihéneuf, P.-A.. Propriétés dynamiques génériques des homéomorphismes conservatifs. Ensaios Matemáticos (Sociedade Brasileira de Matemática, Rio de Janeiro, 2012).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Guihéneuf, P.-A. and Lefeuvre, T.. On the genericity of the shadowing property for conservative homeomorphisms. Proc. Amer. Math. Soc. 146 (2018), 4225–4237.Google Scholar
Hurley, M.. Generic homeomorphisms have no smallest attractors. Proc. Amer. Math. Soc. 123 (4) (1995), 1277–1280.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hurley, M.. Properties of attractors of generic homeomorphisms. Ergodic Theory Dynam. Systems 16 (6) (1996), 12971310.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kiriki, S., Nakano, Y. and Soma, T.. Emergence via non-existence of averages. Adv. in Math. 400 (2022), Paper No. 108254, 30 pp.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kolmogorov, A. N. and Tihomirov, V. M.. $\epsilon-$ Entropy and $\epsilon-$ capacity of sets in functional spaces. Amer. Math. Soc. Transl. 2 (17) (1961), 277–364.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kwietniak, D., Lacka, M. and Oprocha, P.. A panorama of specification-like properties and their consequences. Dynamics and Numbers, Contemporary Mathematics 669 (AMS, Providence, RI, 2016), 155–186.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kra, B. and Schmeling, J.. Diophantine numbers, dimension and Denjoy maps. Acta Arith. 105 (2002), 323–340.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lacerda, G. and Romana, S.. Typical conservative homeomorphisms have total metric mean dimension. IEEE Trans. Inform. Theory 70 (11) (2024), 7664–7672.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lindenstrauss, E. and Weiss, B.. Mean topological dimension. Israel J. Math. 115 (2000), 124.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Misiurewicz, M.. Ergodic natural measures. In: Algebraic and Topological Dynamics, Contemp. Math. 385 (AMS, Providence, RI, 2005), 16.Google Scholar
Nitecki, Z.. Differentiable Dynamics: An Introduction to the Orbit Structure of Diffeomorphisms (MIT Press, Cambridge, Massachussets, 1971).Google Scholar
Oxtoby, J. and Ulam, S.. Measure-preserving homeomorphisms and metrical transitivity. Ann. of Math. 42 (2) (1941), 874920.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Palis, J., Pugh, C., Shub, M. and Sullivan, M.. Genericity theorems in topological dynamics. Dynamical Systems - Warwick 1974, Lecture Notes in Math. 468, (Springer-Verlag New York, 1975), 241–250.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pesin, Ya.. Dimension theory in dynamical systems: Contemporary Views and Applications. Lectures in Mathematics, (Chicago Press, 1997).Google Scholar
Poincaré, H.. Mémoire sur les courbes définies par une équation différentielle, I. J. Math. Pures Appl, 3. série, 7 (1881), 375–422; II. 8 (1882), 251–286; III. 4. série, 1 (1885), 167–244; IV. 2 (1886), 151–217.Google Scholar
Rees, M.. A Minimal positive entropy homeomorphism of the 2-torus. J. London Math. Soc. (2) 23 (1981), 537–550.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Strassen, V.. The existence of probability measures with given marginals. Ann. Math. Statist. 36 (1965), 423–439.Google Scholar
Sun, P.. Equilibrium states of intermediate entropies. Dyn. Syst. 36 1 (2021), 6978.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Villani, C.. Topics in Optimal Transportation. Graduate Studies in Mathematics 58, (AMS, Providence, RI, 2003).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Walters, P.. An Introduction to Ergodic Theory. (Springer-Verlag New York, 1982).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Yano, K.. A remark on the topological entropy of homeomorphisms. Invent. Math. 59 (1980), 215220.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Figure 0

Fig. 1. Positive iterates of a pseudo-horseshoe on a compact manifold (top) and their geometric representation on $\mathbb R^k$ (bottom) using local charts which are signaled by downward arrows.