Intuition
The intuitive concept of dimension of a geometric object ''X'' is the number of independent parameters one needs to pick out a unique point inside. However, any point specified by two parameters can be instead specified by one, because the cardinality of the real plane is equal to the cardinality of the real line (this can be seen by an Cantor's diagonal argument, argument involving interweaving the digits of two numbers to yield a single number encoding the same information). The example of a space-filling curve shows that one can even map the real line to the real plane Surjective function, surjectively (taking one real number into a pair of real numbers in a way so that all pairs of numbers are covered) and ''continuously'', so that a one-dimensional object completely fills up a higher-dimensional object. Every space filling curve hits some points multiple times, and does not have a continuous inverse. It is impossible to map two dimensions onto one in a way that is continuous and continuously invertible. The topological dimension, also called Lebesgue covering dimension, explains why. This dimension is ''n'' if, in every covering of ''X'' by small open balls, there is at least one point where ''n'' + 1 balls overlap. For example, when one covers a line with short open intervals, some points must be covered twice, giving dimension ''n'' = 1. But topological dimension is a very crude measure of the local size of a space (size near a point). A curve that is almost space-filling can still have topological dimension one, even if it fills up most of the area of a region. A fractal has an integer topological dimension, but in terms of the amount of space it takes up, it behaves like a higher-dimensional space. The Hausdorff dimension measures the local size of a space taking into account the distance between points, the metric space, metric. Consider the number ''N''(''r'') of ball (mathematics), balls of radius at most ''r'' required to cover ''X'' completely. When ''r'' is very small, ''N''(''r'') grows polynomially with 1/''r''. For a sufficiently well-behaved ''X'', the Hausdorff dimension is the unique number ''d'' such that N(''r'') grows as 1/''rd'' as ''r'' approaches zero. More precisely, this defines the Minkowski–Bouligand dimension, box-counting dimension, which equals the Hausdorff dimension when the value ''d'' is a critical boundary between growth rates that are insufficient to cover the space, and growth rates that are overabundant. For shapes that are smooth, or shapes with a small number of corners, the shapes of traditional geometry and science, the Hausdorff dimension is an integer agreeing with the topological dimension. But Benoit Mandelbrot observed that fractals, sets with noninteger Hausdorff dimensions, are found everywhere in nature. He observed that the proper idealization of most rough shapes you see around you is not in terms of smooth idealized shapes, but in terms of fractal idealized shapes:Clouds are not spheres, mountains are not cones, coastlines are not circles, and bark is not smooth, nor does lightning travel in a straight line.For fractals that occur in nature, the Hausdorff and Minkowski–Bouligand dimension, box-counting dimension coincide. The packing dimension is yet another similar notion which gives the same value for many shapes, but there are well-documented exceptions where all these dimensions differ.
Formal definitions
Hausdorff content
Let ''X'' be a metric space. If ''S'' ⊂ ''X'' and ''d'' ∈ [0, ∞), the ''d''-dimensional unlimited Hausdorff content of ''S'' is defined by : In other words, is the infimum of the set of numbers such that there is some (indexed) collection of ball (mathematics), balls covering ''S'' with ''ri'' > 0 for each ''i'' ∈ ''I'' that satisfies . (Here, we use the standard convention that infimum, inf Ø = ∞.)Hausdorff measure
The Hausdorff outer measure is different from the unbounded Hausdorff content in that rather than considering all possible coverings of ''S'', we see what happens when the sizes of the balls go to zero. For , we define the ''d''-dimensional Hausdorff outer measure of ''S'' as :Hausdorff dimension
The Hausdorff dimension of ''X'' is defined by : Equivalently, dimH(''X'') may be defined as the infimum of the set of ''d'' ∈ [0, ∞) such that the ''d''-dimensional Hausdorff measure of ''X'' is zero. This is the same as the supremum of the set of ''d'' ∈ [0, ∞) such that the ''d''-dimensional Hausdorff measure of ''X'' is infinite (except that when this latter set of numbers ''d'' is empty the Hausdorff dimension is zero).Examples
* Countable sets have Hausdorff dimension 0. * The Euclidean space ℝ''n'' has Hausdorff dimension ''n'', and the circle S1 has Hausdorff dimension 1. * Fractals often are spaces whose Hausdorff dimension strictly exceeds the topological dimension. For example, the Cantor set, a zero-dimensional topological space, is a union of two copies of itself, each copy shrunk by a factor 1/3; hence, it can be shown that its Hausdorff dimension is ln(2)/ln(3) ≈ 0.63. The Sierpinski triangle is a union of three copies of itself, each copy shrunk by a factor of 1/2; this yields a Hausdorff dimension of ln(3)/ln(2) ≈ 1.58. These Hausdorff dimensions are related to the "critical exponent" of the Master theorem (analysis of algorithms), Master theorem for solving Recurrence relation, recurrence relations in the analysis of algorithms. * Space-filling curves like the Peano curve have the same Hausdorff dimension as the space they fill. * The trajectory of Brownian motion in dimension 2 and above is conjectured to be Hausdorff dimension 2. image:Great Britain Hausdorff.svg, 250px, Estimating the Hausdorff dimension of the How Long Is the Coast of Britain? Statistical Self-Similarity and Fractional Dimension, coast of Great Britain * Lewis Fry Richardson has performed detailed experiments to measure the approximate Hausdorff dimension for various coastlines. His results have varied from 1.02 for the coastline of South Africa to 1.25 for the west coast of Great Britain.Properties of Hausdorff dimension
Hausdorff dimension and inductive dimension
Let ''X'' be an arbitrary Separable space, separable metric space. There is a topology, topological notion of inductive dimension for ''X'' which is defined recursively. It is always an integer (or +∞) and is denoted dimind(''X''). Theorem. Suppose ''X'' is non-empty. Then : Moreover, : where ''Y'' ranges over metric spaces homeomorphic to ''X''. In other words, ''X'' and ''Y'' have the same underlying set of points and the metric ''d''''Y'' of ''Y'' is topologically equivalent to ''d''''X''. These results were originally established by Edward Szpilrajn (1907–1976), e.g., see Hurewicz and Wallman, Chapter VII.Hausdorff dimension and Minkowski dimension
The Minkowski dimension is similar to, and at least as large as, the Hausdorff dimension, and they are equal in many situations. However, the set of rational number, rational points in [0, 1] has Hausdorff dimension zero and Minkowski dimension one. There are also compact sets for which the Minkowski dimension is strictly larger than the Hausdorff dimension.Hausdorff dimensions and Frostman measures
If there is a measure (mathematics), measure μ defined on Borel measure, Borel subsets of a metric space ''X'' such that ''μ''(''X'') > 0 and ''μ''(''B''(''x'', ''r'')) ≤ ''rs'' holds for some constant ''s'' > 0 and for every ball ''B''(''x'', ''r'') in ''X'', then dimHaus(''X'') ≥ ''s''. A partial converse is provided by Frostman's lemma.Behaviour under unions and products
If is a finite or countable union, then : This can be verified directly from the definition. If ''X'' and ''Y'' are non-empty metric spaces, then the Hausdorff dimension of their product satisfies : This inequality can be strict. It is possible to find two sets of dimension 0 whose product has dimension 1. In the opposite direction, it is known that when ''X'' and ''Y'' are Borel subsets of R''n'', the Hausdorff dimension of ''X'' × ''Y'' is bounded from above by the Hausdorff dimension of ''X'' plus the packing dimension, upper packing dimension of ''Y''. These facts are discussed in Mattila (1995).Self-similar sets
Many sets defined by a self-similarity condition have dimensions which can be determined explicitly. Roughly, a set ''E'' is self-similar if it is the fixed point of a set-valued transformation ψ, that is ψ(''E'') = ''E'', although the exact definition is given below.Theorem. Suppose : are Contraction mapping, contractive mappings on R''n'' with contraction constant ''rj'' < 1. Then there is a unique ''non-empty'' compact set ''A'' such that :The theorem follows from Stefan Banach's Contractive mapping theorem, contractive mapping fixed point theorem applied to the complete metric space of non-empty compact subsets of R''n'' with the Hausdorff distance.
The open set condition
To determine the dimension of the self-similar set ''A'' (in certain cases), we need a technical condition called the ''open set condition'' (OSC) on the sequence of contractions ψ''i''. There is a relatively compact open set ''V'' such that : where the sets in union on the left are pairwise disjoint sets, disjoint. The open set condition is a separation condition that ensures the images ψ''i''(''V'') do not overlap "too much". Theorem. Suppose the open set condition holds and each ψ''i'' is a similitude, that is a composition of an isometry and a dilation (metric space), dilation around some point. Then the unique fixed point of ψ is a set whose Hausdorff dimension is ''s'' where ''s'' is the unique solution of : The contraction coefficient of a similitude is the magnitude of the dilation. We can use this theorem to compute the Hausdorff dimension of the Sierpinski triangle (or sometimes called Sierpinski gasket). Consider three non-collinear points ''a''1, ''a''2, ''a''3 in the plane R2 and let ψ''i'' be the dilation of ratio 1/2 around ''ai''. The unique non-empty fixed point of the corresponding mapping ψ is a Sierpinski gasket and the dimension ''s'' is the unique solution of : Taking natural logarithms of both sides of the above equation, we can solve for ''s'', that is: ''s'' = ln(3)/ln(2). The Sierpinski gasket is self-similar and satisfies the OSC. In general a set ''E'' which is a fixed point of a mapping : is self-similar if and only if the intersections : where ''s'' is the Hausdorff dimension of ''E'' and ''Hs'' denotes Hausdorff measure. This is clear in the case of the Sierpinski gasket (the intersections are just points), but is also true more generally: Theorem. Under the same conditions as the previous theorem, the unique fixed point of ψ is self-similar.See also
* List of fractals by Hausdorff dimension Examples of deterministic fractals, random and natural fractals. * Assouad dimension, another variation of fractal dimension that, like Hausdorff dimension, is defined using coverings by balls * Intrinsic dimension * Packing dimension * Fractal dimensionReferences
Further reading
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