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arxiv: 2604.25881 · v1 · submitted 2026-04-28 · 🧮 math.DS

Every finite horizon Sinai billiard map has a unique measure of maximal entropy

Pith reviewed 2026-05-07 14:26 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification 🧮 math.DS
keywords Sinai billiardsmeasure of maximal entropythermodynamic formalismuniformly hyperbolic systemsone-sided subshiftsHausdorff measuressystems with singularities
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The pith

Every finite horizon Sinai billiard map has a unique measure of maximal entropy obtained as the product of Hausdorff measures on its one-sided subshifts.

A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.

The paper establishes that finite horizon Sinai billiard maps, which are uniformly hyperbolic but have singularities, always possess a unique measure of maximal entropy. Previous results required an extra sparse recurrence condition on the billiard table, but this work removes that assumption with a new proof. The unique measure is built concretely as the product of Hausdorff measures on the one-sided subshifts tied to the map. This matters because it completes the basic thermodynamic description for these classic examples of chaotic billiards, allowing entropy to be analyzed without restrictive geometric assumptions on the table.

Core claim

The paper proves that every finite horizon Sinai billiard map admits a unique measure of maximal entropy. The construction is explicit: the measure is the product of the Hausdorff measures on the one-sided subshifts associated to the billiard map. This holds without assuming the sparse recurrence condition that was needed in earlier work.

What carries the argument

The product of the Hausdorff measures on the one-sided subshifts associated to the billiard map, which serves as the explicit construction of the unique measure of maximal entropy.

If this is right

  • The variational principle for the entropy holds for all finite horizon Sinai billiard maps.
  • The sparse recurrence condition is unnecessary for proving uniqueness of the MME.
  • The MME can be constructed directly from the subshifts for any such billiard table.
  • Thermodynamic formalism applies to the full class of finite horizon Sinai billiards.

Where Pith is reading between the lines

These are editorial extensions of the paper, not claims the author makes directly.

  • This explicit construction may enable direct computation of the topological entropy for specific billiard geometries.
  • The approach could generalize to other uniformly hyperbolic maps with singularities where subshifts can be defined.
  • Removing the sparse recurrence requirement broadens the applicability of uniqueness results in ergodic theory for billiards.

Load-bearing premise

The one-sided subshifts associated with the billiard map are well-defined and their Hausdorff measures produce a measure of maximal entropy for the billiard dynamics.

What would settle it

A specific finite horizon Sinai billiard table for which the product of the subshift Hausdorff measures fails to achieve the supremum entropy, or for which a different invariant measure achieves strictly higher entropy.

Figures

Figures reproduced from arXiv: 2604.25881 by Jason Day, Vaughn Climenhaga.

Figure 1.1
Figure 1.1. Figure 1.1: Trajectories of a particle on a billiard table. 1.2. Sinai billiards. The Sinai billiard flow described informally in the previous section is illustrated in view at source ↗
Figure 1.2
Figure 1.2. Figure 1.2: Phase space for the billiard map. The billiard map T : M → M is illustrated in view at source ↗
Figure 1.3
Figure 1.3. Figure 1.3: The billiard map and its cones. Throughout the arguments, we will use the hyperbolicity properties of the bil￾liard map, especially the invariant cones for DT : TM → TM. Since elements of M are represented by pairs (r, φ), it is common to represent elements of TxM by pairs (dr, dφ) ∈ R 2 . In these coordinates, one can present invariant cones for DT. Start by letting Kmin and Kmax denote the minimum and … view at source ↗
Figure 1.4
Figure 1.4. Figure 1.4: The partition P on a connected component Mi ⊂ M. Let P be the finite partition of M into the maximal connected sets on which both T and T −1 are continuous; part of this partition is shown in view at source ↗
Figure 3.1
Figure 3.1. Figure 3.1: Elements of S1 are component curves of TS0. Lemma 3.4 (Noncrossing). (a) If V, W ∈ Sn are components of T nS0, then V ∩ W ⊂ ∂V ∪ ∂W: any inter￾section point x must be an endpoint of either V or W. (b) If W ∈ Sn is a component of T nS0 and x ∈ W ∩ T kS0 for some 0 ≤ k < n, then x ∈ ∂W. Proof. For the first claim, suppose that x ∈ W◦ ∩ V . Since W◦ = T nS for some connected component S of S0 \ S′ n , there… view at source ↗
Figure 3.2
Figure 3.2. Figure 3.2: Tangential collisions blocked by a scatterer. There could be multiple scatterers that are tangent to the trajectory from Bi to Bj associated to T −1x, but one of them must be closest to Bj ; we will call this scatterer Bk. Because x ∈ ∂W, it follows that T −1x ∈ ∂Mk. There must be a V ⊂ S0 such that T −1x ∈ V ◦ and we get T V ⊂ Mj and x ∈ (T V ) ◦ . We proceed by induction, and assume the statement holds… view at source ↗
Figure 3.3
Figure 3.3. Figure 3.3: The shaded region is the intersection of a cell of M0 −1 and a cell of M1 0 . Remark 3.14. If we coded by cells of M0 −1 or of M1 0 instead of M1 −1 , then the above proof would fail in the last paragraph, because Iw ∩ Ia might not be an interval view at source ↗
Figure 3.4
Figure 3.4. Figure 3.4: Nongrazing collisions can limit on a grazing collision, resulting in tangential trajectories with multiple codings, some of which “miss” one or more symbols in the sequence. In addition to the problem pointed out in Remark 3.16, the map π is not injective on X. The second part of view at source ↗
Figure 3.5
Figure 3.5. Figure 3.5: A solid rectangle. Definition 3.18. A solid rectangle is a closed and connected region D ⊂ M that is bounded by two nontrivial stable manifolds Ws 1 , Ws 2 and two nontrivial unstable manifolds Wu 1 , Wu 2 with the property that each Ws i intersects each Wu j in a point which is interior to both curves; see view at source ↗
Figure 3.6
Figure 3.6. Figure 3.6: Crossing of an image of a subcurve of V . Proposition 3.19 (Sufficient rectangles). There exists a countable cover R of Mreg by Cantor rectangles such that for every δ > 0 and every R0 ∈ R, there are R1, . . . , Rℓ ∈ R that are δ-sufficient in the following sense: there exists N ∈ N such that for every V ∈ Vu δ = {V ∈ Vu : |V | ≥ δ}, we have the behavior shown in view at source ↗
Figure 3
Figure 3. Figure 3: , namely view at source ↗
Figure 4.1
Figure 4.1. Figure 4.1: Lower bound on the average length of a curve. For every w ∈ Gρ k (V ), we have |T kVw| ≥ ρ by definition. Moreover, since the curves {Vw : w ∈ Gρ k (V )} have disjoint interiors, we have P w∈Gρ k (V ) |T nVw| ≤ |T nV |, and we conclude that #L V n ≤ C6|T nV | e −γn |V | + 1 ρ Xn k=1 e −γ(n−k)  ≤ 2C6|T nV | max e −γn|V | −1 , (1 − e −γ ) −1 ρ −1  . Taking b2 = (2C6) −1 and b1 = b2ρ(1 − e −γ ), this pro… view at source ↗
Figure 4.2
Figure 4.2. Figure 4.2: Cells in Ik and I c k . Lemma 4.17. There exists C7 > 0 such that for every k ∈ N, we have #S ′ k ≤ C7 and #Ik ≤ C7. Proof. Consider the following (finite) set of points: (4.13) F := [ {V ∩ W : V, W ∈ S1, V ̸= W}. Let K be as in Lemma 3.7, so that at most K components of S1 meet at any single point in F, and let C7 := (K + 1)(#F). Observe that if V ∈ Sk intersects some other W ∈ Sk at a point x, then x ∈… view at source ↗
Figure 5.1
Figure 5.1. Figure 5.1: Proving that Ws and Wu are jointly ergodic. Let Bi := (σ N (Vi) ∩ R) \ G for i = 1, 2. Since m+ x (V1 \ G) = 0, we can use the invariance of G and the scaling properties of m+ from Proposition 2.2 to conclude that m+ q (B1) = m+ q (σ N (V1 \ G)) = 0, and similarly, m+ s (B2) = 0. By Lemma 2.14, this implies that m+ z (πq,z(B1) ∪ πs,z(B2)) = 0. Since m+ z (R) > 0, there exists z ′ ∈ (Wu loc(z) ∩ R) \ (πq,… view at source ↗
read the original abstract

Finite horizon Sinai billiard maps are examples of uniformly hyperbolic systems with singularities. These discontinuities make it more difficult to develop the classical theory of thermodynamic formalism. Nevertheless, Baladi and Demers established a variational principle for these systems, and proved that if the billiard table satisfies a certain sparse recurrence condition, then there is a unique measure of maximal entropy. We extend this existence and uniqueness result to all finite horizon Sinai billiard maps by giving a new proof that does not rely on the sparse recurrence condition. Our construction is very concrete: the unique MME is obtained as the product of the Hausdorff measures on the one-sided subshifts associated to the billiard map.

Editorial analysis

A structured set of objections, weighed in public.

Desk editor's note, referee report, simulated authors' rebuttal, and a circularity audit. Tearing a paper down is the easy half of reading it; the pith above is the substance, this is the friction.

Referee Report

0 major / 2 minor

Summary. The paper proves that every finite horizon Sinai billiard map admits a unique measure of maximal entropy (MME). The authors give a new proof that constructs this MME explicitly as the product of the Hausdorff measures on the one-sided subshifts associated to the billiard map, thereby extending the variational principle of Baladi-Demers to all such systems without requiring the sparse recurrence condition.

Significance. If the result holds, it supplies a concrete, parameter-free construction of the unique MME directly from Hausdorff measures on the natural one-sided subshifts. This explicit product structure, which is shown to be invariant, ergodic, and entropy-maximizing, strengthens the thermodynamic formalism for uniformly hyperbolic maps with singularities and removes a technical obstruction that limited prior results to a subclass of tables.

minor comments (2)
  1. [Abstract / Introduction] The abstract states that the subshifts are 'associated to the billiard map' but does not immediately indicate whether they arise from a standard Markov partition or a different coding; a single clarifying sentence in the introduction would help readers unfamiliar with the coding.
  2. [§2] Notation for the one-sided versus two-sided subshifts is used throughout; a short table or diagram in §2 comparing the two would improve readability.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

0 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for their positive assessment of our manuscript and for recommending acceptance. The referee's summary correctly identifies the main result and its relation to the work of Baladi and Demers.

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

No significant circularity

full rationale

The derivation constructs the MME explicitly as the product of Hausdorff measures on one-sided subshifts coded from the billiard map via standard Markov partitions. This is a direct, non-fitted definition that is then verified to be invariant, ergodic, and entropy-maximizing for any finite-horizon Sinai billiard (uniform hyperbolicity with singularities). The argument does not reduce any central claim to a self-citation chain, a fitted parameter renamed as prediction, or an ansatz imported from the authors' prior work; the sparse-recurrence condition is explicitly bypassed rather than assumed. The construction is self-contained against external benchmarks of topological entropy and measure theory.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

0 free parameters · 2 axioms · 0 invented entities

The paper rests on standard domain assumptions for Sinai billiards and symbolic dynamics; no free parameters or invented entities are introduced in the abstract.

axioms (2)
  • domain assumption Finite horizon Sinai billiards are uniformly hyperbolic with singularities
    This is the standard setup stated in the abstract for the systems under study.
  • domain assumption The one-sided subshifts associated to the billiard map admit Hausdorff measures that realize the measure of maximal entropy
    Invoked directly in the construction of the unique MME.

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Reference graph

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