Lebesgue spine

Lebesgue spine

In mathematics, in the area of potential theory, a Lebesgue spine or Lebesgue thorn is a type of set used for discussing solutions to the Dirichlet problem and related problems of potential theory. The Lebesgue spine was introduced in 1912 by Henri Lebesgue to demonstrate that the Dirichlet problem does not always have a solution, particularly when the boundary has a sufficiently sharp edge protruding into the interior of the region.

Definition

A typical Lebesgue spine in R^n, for nge 3, is defined as follows:S = {(x_1,x_2,dots,x_n)inR^n : x_n>0, x_1^2+x_2^2+cdots+x_{n-1}^2 le exp(-1/x_n^2).

The important features of this set are that it is connected and path-connected in the euclidean topology in R^n and the origin is a limit point of the set, and yet the set is thin at the origin, as defined in the article Fine topology (potential theory).

Observations

The set S is not closed in the euclidean topology since it does not contain the origin which is a limit point of S, but the set is closed in the fine topology in R^n.

In comparison, it is not possible in R^2 to construct such a connected set which is thin at the origin.

References

* J. L. Doob. "Classical Potential Theory and Its Probabilistic Counterpart", Springer-Verlag, Berlin Heidelberg New York, ISBN 3-540-41206-9.
*L. L. Helms (1975). "Introduction to potential theory". R. E. Krieger ISBN 0-88275-224-3.


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем решить контрольную работу

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Henri Lebesgue — Infobox Scientist name =Henri Lebesgue box width =26em image width =225px caption = birth date =1875 06 28 birth place =Beauvais, France death date =death date and age|1941|7|26|1875|6|28 death place =Paris, France residence = citizenship =… …   Wikipedia

  • List of mathematics articles (L) — NOTOC L L (complexity) L BFGS L² cohomology L function L game L notation L system L theory L Analyse des Infiniment Petits pour l Intelligence des Lignes Courbes L Hôpital s rule L(R) La Géométrie Labeled graph Labelled enumeration theorem Lack… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”