Central sets defined by words of low factor complexity
Michelangelo Bucci, Svetlana Puzynina, Luca Q. Zamboni

TL;DR
This paper explores how low factor complexity words, like Sturmian and Arnoux-Rauzy words, can generate central sets with rich combinatorial properties, linking combinatorics on words, dynamical systems, and ultrafilter theory.
Contribution
It introduces a novel connection between low complexity words and the generation of central sets, offering new insights into the strong coincidence conjecture for Pisot substitutions.
Findings
Constructed central sets from Sturmian and Arnoux-Rauzy words.
Linked central sets to the strong coincidence condition in substitution systems.
Applied ultrafilter techniques to combinatorics on words.
Abstract
A subset of is called an IP-set if contains all finite sums of distinct terms of some infinite sequence of natural numbers. Central sets, first introduced by Furstenberg using notions from topological dynamics, constitute a special class of IP-sets possessing additional nice combinatorial properties: Each central set contains arbitrarily long arithmetic progressions, and solutions to all partition regular systems of homogeneous linear equations. In this paper we show how certain families of aperiodic words of low factor complexity may be used to generate a wide assortment of central sets having additional nice properties inherited from the rich combinatorial structure of the underlying word. We consider Sturmian words and their extensions to higher alphabets (so-called Arnoux-Rauzy words), as well as words generated by substitution rules…
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Taxonomy
Topicssemigroups and automata theory · Computability, Logic, AI Algorithms · Mathematical Dynamics and Fractals
