An answer to Furstenberg's problem on topological disjointness
Abstract: In this paper we give an answer to Furstenberg's problem on topological disjointness. Namely, we show that a transitive system $(X,T)$ is disjoint from all minimal systems if and only if $(X,T)$ is weakly mixing and there is some countable dense subset $D$ of $X$ such that for any minimal system $(Y,S)$, any point $y\in Y$ and any open neighbourhood $V$ of $y$, and for any nonempty open subset $U\subset X$, there is $x\in D\cap U$ satisfying that ${n\in{ \mathbb Z}_+: Tnx\in U, Sny\in V}$ is syndetic. Some characterization for the general case is also described. As applications we show that if a transitive system $(X,T)$ is disjoint from all minimal systems, then so are $(Xn,T{(n)})$ and $(X, Tn)$ for any $n\in { \mathbb N}$. It turns out that a transitive system $(X,T)$ is disjoint from all minimal systems if and only if the hyperspace system $(K(X),T_K)$ is disjoint from all minimal systems.
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