Starting with a substitution tiling, we demonstrate a method for constructing infinitely many new substitution tilings. Each of these new tilings is derived from a graph iterated function system and the tiles have fractal boundary. We show that each of the new tilings is mutually locally derivable to the original tiling. Thus, at the tiling space level, the new substitution rules are expressing geometric and combinatorial, rather than topological, features of the original. Our method is easy to apply to particular substitution tilings, permits experimentation, and can be used to construct border-forcing substitution rules. For a large class of examples we show that the combinatorial dual tiling has a realization as a substitution tiling. Si...
Substitutions are combinatorial objects (one replaces a letter by a word) which produce sequences by...
Substitutions are combinatorial objects (one replaces a letter by a word) which produce sequences by...
This thesis is an exposition of the article by Richard Darst, Judith Palagallo and Thomas Price, ent...
Starting with a substitution tiling, we demonstrate a method for constructing infinitely many new su...
Starting with a substitution tiling, we demonstrate a method for constructing infinitely many new su...
A fractal tiling or f-tiling is a tiling which possesses self-similarity and the boundary of which i...
This study proposes a method for producing an endless number of fractals using aperiodic substitutio...
International audienceIn this talk we will survey several decidability and undecidability results on...
We introduce a new class of noncommutative spectral triples on Kellendonk's C*-algebra associated wi...
We introduce a new class of noncommutative spectral triples on Kellendonk's C*-algebra associated wi...
AbstractThis paper is intended to provide an introduction to the theory of substitution tilings. For...
International audienceIn this talk we will survey several decidability and undecidability results on...
International audienceIn this talk we will survey several decidability and undecidability results on...
Substitutions are combinatorial objects (one replaces a letter by a word) which produce sequences by...
Substitutions are combinatorial objects (one replaces a letter by a word) which produce sequences by...
Substitutions are combinatorial objects (one replaces a letter by a word) which produce sequences by...
Substitutions are combinatorial objects (one replaces a letter by a word) which produce sequences by...
This thesis is an exposition of the article by Richard Darst, Judith Palagallo and Thomas Price, ent...
Starting with a substitution tiling, we demonstrate a method for constructing infinitely many new su...
Starting with a substitution tiling, we demonstrate a method for constructing infinitely many new su...
A fractal tiling or f-tiling is a tiling which possesses self-similarity and the boundary of which i...
This study proposes a method for producing an endless number of fractals using aperiodic substitutio...
International audienceIn this talk we will survey several decidability and undecidability results on...
We introduce a new class of noncommutative spectral triples on Kellendonk's C*-algebra associated wi...
We introduce a new class of noncommutative spectral triples on Kellendonk's C*-algebra associated wi...
AbstractThis paper is intended to provide an introduction to the theory of substitution tilings. For...
International audienceIn this talk we will survey several decidability and undecidability results on...
International audienceIn this talk we will survey several decidability and undecidability results on...
Substitutions are combinatorial objects (one replaces a letter by a word) which produce sequences by...
Substitutions are combinatorial objects (one replaces a letter by a word) which produce sequences by...
Substitutions are combinatorial objects (one replaces a letter by a word) which produce sequences by...
Substitutions are combinatorial objects (one replaces a letter by a word) which produce sequences by...
This thesis is an exposition of the article by Richard Darst, Judith Palagallo and Thomas Price, ent...