The theorems of Berkeley mathematician Marina Ratner have guided key
advances in the understanding of dynamical systems. Unipotent flows are
well-behaved dynamical systems, and Ratner has shown that the closure of
every orbit for such a flow is of a simple algebraic or geometric form.
In Ratner's Theorems on Unipotent Flows, Dave Witte Morris provides
both an elementary introduction to these theorems and an account of the
proof of Ratner's measure classification theorem.
A collection of lecture notes aimed at graduate students, the first four
chapters of Ratner's Theorems on Unipotent Flows can be read
independently. The first chapter, intended for a fairly general
audience, provides an introduction with examples that illustrate the
theorems, some of their applications, and the main ideas involved in the
proof. In the following chapters, Morris introduces entropy, ergodic
theory, and the theory of algebraic groups. The book concludes with a
proof of the measure-theoretic version of Ratner's Theorem. With new
material that has never before been published in book form, Ratner's
Theorems on Unipotent Flows helps bring these important theorems to a
broader mathematical readership.