I am Mathematics student taking a graduate Ergodic Theory class. We are going over a lot of mathematical theory, but I would like to understand (at least at a superficial level) the connection with physics.
Here's what I know about ET: we usually study a measure space $(X, B, \mu)$ with a measure preserving transformation $f : X \to X$. We may also have function $\alpha:X \to \mathbb{R}$ or $\mathbb{C}$. Under various hypotheses we have lots of theorems about the behavior of points of $x$. For example, almost all points will have a dense orbit; almost every point is recurrent; the Ergodic Theorem; etc.
What I'm not sure about is exactly how this connects to the behavior of gasses trapped in a box (say, the unit cube $[0, 1]^3$). Each molecule has $3$ components of velocity. My confusion is:
- What is the space $X$? Is it $[0, 1]^3 \times \mathbb{R}^3?$ Or is it a finite subset of $[0, 1]^3 \times \mathbb{R}^3?$ consisting of those points which describe the finite number of molecules?
- What is the function $f$? If molecule $A$ is at point $p$ in $[0, 1]^3 \times \mathbb{R}^3$, is $f(p)$ the state of the molecule after (say) 1 second? What about $f(p)$ for points $p$ that do not correspond to any molecules?
- What about the observable $\alpha$? Similar questions about the domain of $\alpha$ as about the domain of $f$.
- What is the measure here?
Thank you very much.