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The theory of random dynamical systems originated from
stochastic
differential equations. It is intended to provide a framework
and
techniques to describe and analyze the evolution of dynamical
systems when the input and output data are known only
approximately, according to some probability distribution. The
development of this field, in both the theory and applications, has
gone in many directions. In this manuscript we introduce measurable
expanding random dynamical systems, develop the thermodynamical
formalism and establish, in particular, the exponential decay of
correlations and analyticity of the expected pressure although the
spectral gap property does not hold. This theory is then used to
investigate fractal properties of conformal random systems. We
prove a Bowen s formula and develop the multifractal formalism of
the Gibbs states. Depending on the behavior of the Birkhoff sums of
the pressure function we arrive at a natural classification of the
systems into two classes: quasi-deterministic systems, which share
many
properties of deterministic ones; and essentially random systems,
which are rather generic and never bi-Lipschitz equivalent to
deterministic systems. We show that in the essentially random case
the Hausdorff measure vanishes, which refutes a conjecture by
Bogenschutz and Ochs.Lastly, we present applications of our results
to various specific conformal random systems and positively answer
a question posed by Bruck and Buger concerning the Hausdorff
dimension of quadratic random Julia sets."
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