arXiv:1812.01066 [math.DS]AbstractReferencesReviewsResources
Rationality is decidable for nearly Euclidean Thurston maps
William Floyd, Walter Parry, Kevin M. Pilgrim
Published 2018-12-03Version 1
Nearly Euclidean Thurston (NET) maps are described by simple diagrams which admit a natural notion of size. Given a size bound $C$, there are finitely many diagrams of size at most $C$. Given a NET map $F$ presented by a diagram of size at most $C$, the problem of determining whether $F$ is equivalent to a rational function is, in theory, a finite computation. We give bounds for the size of this computation in terms of $C$ and one other natural geometric quantity. This result partially explains the observed effectiveness of the computer program NETmap in deciding rationality.
Comments: 26 pages, 6 figures
Categories: math.DS
Related articles: Most relevant | Search more
arXiv:1204.3615 [math.DS] (Published 2012-04-16)
Nearly Euclidean Thurston maps
arXiv:1602.05614 [math.DS] (Published 2016-02-17)
Rationality of dynamical canonical height
arXiv:1612.06449 [math.DS] (Published 2016-12-19)
Origami, affine maps, and complex dynamics