قياس هاوس‌دورف

(تم التحويل من Hausdorff measure)

في الرياضيات، قياس هاوس‌دورف Hausdorff measure هم تعميم للمفاهيم التقليدية للمساحة والحجم لأبعاد غير صحيحة، خصوصاً الكسيريات وأبعاد هاوس‌دورف الخاصة بهم. وهو نوع من القياس الخارجي، المسمى على اسم فليكس هاوسدورف، الذي يخصص رقماً في [0,∞] لكل فئة في n أو، عموماً، في أي فضاء قياسي.

The zero-dimensional Hausdorff measure is the number of points in the set (if the set is finite) or ∞ if the set is infinite. Likewise, the one-dimensional Hausdorff measure of a simple curve in n is equal to the length of the curve, and the two-dimensional Hausdorff measure of a Lebesgue-measurable subset of 2 is proportional to the area of the set. Thus, the concept of the Hausdorff measure generalizes the Lebesgue measure and its notions of counting, length, and area. It also generalizes volume. In fact, there are d-dimensional Hausdorff measures for any d ≥ 0, which is not necessarily an integer. These measures are fundamental in geometric measure theory. They appear naturally in harmonic analysis or potential theory.

التعريف

Let (X,ρ) be a metric space. For any subset UX, let diamU denote its diameter, that is

diamU:=sup{ρ(x,y):x,yU},diam:=0.

Let S be any subset of X, and δ>0 a real number. Define

Hδd(S)=inf{i=1(diamUi)d:i=1UiS,diamUi<δ},

where the infimum is over all countable covers of S by sets UiX satisfying diamUi<δ.

Note that Hδd(S) is monotone nonincreasing in δ since the larger δ is, the more collections of sets are permitted, making the infimum not larger. Thus, limδ0Hδd(S) exists but may be infinite. Let

Hd(S):=supδ>0Hδd(S)=limδ0Hδd(S).

It can be seen that Hd(S) is an outer measure (more precisely, it is a metric outer measure). By Carathéodory's extension theorem, its restriction to the σ-field of Carathéodory-measurable sets is a measure. It is called the d-dimensional Hausdorff measure of S. Due to the metric outer measure property, all Borel subsets of X are Hd measurable.

In the above definition the sets in the covering are arbitrary. However, we can require the covering sets to be open or closed, or in normed spaces even convex, that will yield the same Hδd(S) numbers, hence the same measure. In n restricting the covering sets to be balls may change the measures but does not change the dimension of the measured sets.

خصائص قياسات هاوس‌دورف

Note that if d is a positive integer, the d-dimensional Hausdorff measure of d is a rescaling of the usual d-dimensional Lebesgue measure λd, which is normalized so that the Lebesgue measure of the unit cube [0,1]d is 1. In fact, for any Borel set E,

λd(E)=2dαdHd(E),

where αd is the volume of the unit d-ball; it can be expressed using Euler's gamma function

αd=Γ(12)dΓ(d2+1)=πd/2Γ(d2+1).

وهذا هو

λd(E)=βdHd(E),

where βd is the volume of the unit diameter d-ball.

Remark. Some authors adopt a definition of Hausdorff measure slightly different from the one chosen here, the difference being that the value Hd(E) defined above is multiplied by the factor βd=2dαd, so that Hausdorff d-dimensional measure coincides exactly with Lebesgue measure in the case of Euclidean space.

العلاقة ببعد هاوس‌دورف

It turns out that Hd(S) may have a finite, nonzero value for at most one d. That is, the Hausdorff Measure is zero for any value above a certain dimension and infinity below a certain dimension, analogous to the idea that the area of a line is zero and the length of a 2D shape is in some sense infinity. This leads to one of several possible equivalent definitions of the Hausdorff dimension:

dimHaus(S)=inf{d0:Hd(S)=0}=sup{d0:Hd(S)=},

where we take inf=+ and sup=0.

Note that it is not guaranteed that the Hausdorff measure must be finite and nonzero for some d, and indeed the measure at the Hausdorff dimension may still be zero; in this case, the Hausdorff dimension still acts as a change point between measures of zero and infinity.

التعميمات

In geometric measure theory and related fields, the Minkowski content is often used to measure the size of a subset of a metric measure space. For suitable domains in Euclidean space, the two notions of size coincide, up to overall normalizations depending on conventions. More precisely, a subset of n is said to be m-rectifiable if it is the image of a bounded set in m under a Lipschitz function. If m<n, then the m-dimensional Minkowski content of a closed m-rectifiable subset of n is equal to 2mαm times the m-dimensional Hausdorff measure (Federer 1969, Theorem 3.2.29).

In fractal geometry, some fractals with Hausdorff dimension d have zero or infinite d-dimensional Hausdorff measure. For example, almost surely the image of planar Brownian motion has Hausdorff dimension 2 and its two-dimensional Hausdorff measure is zero. In order to "measure" the "size" of such sets, the following variation on the notion of the Hausdorff measure can be considered:

In the definition of the measure (diamUi)d is replaced with ϕ(Ui), where ϕ is any monotone increasing set function satisfying ϕ()=0.

This is the Hausdorff measure of S with gauge function ϕ, or ϕ-Hausdorff measure. A d-dimensional set S may satisfy Hd(S)=0, but Hϕ(S)(0,) with an appropriate ϕ. Examples of gauge functions include

ϕ(t)=t2loglog1torϕ(t)=t2log1tlogloglog1t.

The former gives almost surely positive and σ-finite measure to the Brownian path in n when n>2, and the latter when n=2.

انظر أيضاً

المراجع

وصلات خارجية

قالب:Measure theory