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We introduce and study the notion of hereditary frequent hypercyclicity, which is a reinforcement of the well known concept of frequent hypercyclicity. This notion is useful for the study of the dynamical properties of direct sums of operators; in particular, a basic observation is that the direct sum of a hereditarily frequently hypercyclic operator with any frequently hypercyclic operator is frequently hypercyclic. Among other results, we show that operators satisfying the Frequent Hypercyclicity Criterion are hereditarily frequently hypercyclic, as well as a large class of operators whose unimodular eigenvectors are spanning with respect to the Lebesgue measure. On the other hand, we exhibit two frequently hypercyclic weighted shifts Bw, Bₖ' on c₀ (Z_+) whose direct sum Bw Bₖ' is not U-frequently hypercyclic (so that neither of them is hereditarily frequently hypercyclic), and we construct a C-type operator on ₚ (Z_+), 1 p< which is frequently hypercyclic but not hereditarily frequently hypercyclic. We also solve several problems concerning disjoint frequent hypercyclicity: we show that for every N, any disjoint frequently hypercyclic N-tuple of operators (T₁, , TN) can be extended to a disjoint frequently hypercyclic (N+1) -tuple (T₁, , TN, T₍+₁) as soon as the underlying space supports a hereditarily frequently hypercyclic operator; we construct a disjoint frequently hypercyclic pair which is not densely disjoint hypercyclic; and we show that the pair (D, ₐ) is disjoint frequently hypercyclic, where D is the derivation operator acting on the space of entire functions and ₐ is the operator of translation by a\ 0\. Part of our results are in fact obtained in the general setting of Furstenberg families.
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Frédéric Bayart
Eötvös Loránd University
Sophie Grivaux
Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique
Étienne Matheron
Université d'Artois
Université de Lille
Université Clermont Auvergne
University of Mons
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Bayart et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/68e58de3b6db64358752962f — DOI: https://doi.org/10.48550/arxiv.2409.07103
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