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Rotation number
In mathematics, the rotation number is an invariant of homeomorphisms of the circle.
History
It was first defined by Henri Poincaré in 1885, in relation to the precession of the perihelion of a planetary orbit. Poincaré later proved a theorem characterizing the existence of periodic orbits in terms of rationality of the rotation number.
Definition
Suppose that is an orientation-preserving homeomorphism of the circle Then f may be lifted to a homeomorphism of the real line, satisfying for every real number x and every integer m. The rotation number of f is defined in terms of the iterates of F: Henri Poincaré proved that the limit exists and is independent of the choice of the starting point x. The lift F is unique modulo integers, therefore the rotation number is a well-defined element of \R/\Z. Intuitively, it measures the average rotation angle along the orbits of f.
Example
If f is a rotation by 2\pi N (where 0 < N < 1), then and its rotation number is N (cf. irrational rotation).
Properties
The rotation number is invariant under topological conjugacy, and even monotone topological semiconjugacy: if f and g are two homeomorphisms of the circle and for a monotone continuous map h of the circle into itself (not necessarily homeomorphic) then f and g have the same rotation numbers. It was used by Poincaré and Arnaud Denjoy for topological classification of homeomorphisms of the circle. There are two distinct possibilities. f–1 , but the limiting periodic orbits in forward and backward directions may be different. The rotation number is continuous when viewed as a map from the group of homeomorphisms (with C0 topology) of the circle into the circle.
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