Digit frequencies of beta-expansions (1910.03292v1)
Abstract: Let $\beta>1$ be a non-integer. First we show that Lebesgue almost every number has a $\beta$-expansion of a given frequency if and only if Lebesgue almost every number has infinitely many $\beta$-expansions of the same given frequency. Then we deduce that Lebesgue almost every number has infinitely many balanced $\beta$-expansions, where an infinite sequence on the finite alphabet ${0,1,\cdots,m}$ is called balanced if the frequency of the digit $k$ is equal to the frequency of the digit $m-k$ for all $k\in{0,1,\cdots,m}$. Finally we consider variable frequency and prove that for every pseudo-golden ratio $\beta\in(1,2)$, there exists a constant $c=c(\beta)>0$ such that for any $p\in[\frac{1}{2}-c,\frac{1}{2}+c]$, Lebesgue almost every $x$ has infinitely many $\beta$-expansions with frequency of zeros equal to $p$.