.(One can assume, with no loss of generality, that the index set is the natural numbers .) Here, we use the standard convention that inf Ø =∞. The Hausdorff dimension of is defined by:Equivalently, may be defined as the infimum of the set of such that the -dimensional Hausdorff measure of is zero. This is the same as the supremum of the set of such that the -dimensional Hausdorff measure of is infinite (except that when this latter set of numbers is empty the Hausdorff dimension is zero).
Examples
* The Euclidean space R"n" has Hausdorff dimension "n".
* The circle S1 has Hausdorff dimension 1.
* Countable sets have Hausdorff dimension 0.
* 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; this fact can be used to prove that its Hausdorff dimension is which is approximately (see natural logarithm). 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 , which is approximately .
* Space-filling curves like the Peano and the Sierpiński curve have the same Hausdorff dimension as the space they fill.
* The trajectory of Brownian motion in dimension 2 and above has Hausdorff dimension 2 almost surely.
* An early paper by Benoit Mandelbrot entitled "How Long Is the Coast of Britain? Statistical Self-Similarity and Fractional Dimension" and subsequent work by other authors have claimed that the Hausdorff dimension of many coastlines can be estimated. Their results have varied from 1.02 for the coastline of South Africa to 1.25 for the west coast of Great Britain. However, 'fractal dimensions' of coastlines and many other natural phenomena are largely heuristic and cannot be regarded rigorously as a Hausdorff dimension. It is based on scaling properties of coastlines at a large range of scales, but which does not however include all arbitrarily small scales, where measurements would depend on atomic and sub-atomic structures, and are not well defined.
Properties of Hausdorff dimension
Hausdorff dimension and inductive dimension
Let "X" be an arbitrary separable metric space. There is a 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). The treatment in Chapter VIII of the Hurewicz and Wallman reference is particularly recommended.
Hausdorff dimension and Minkowski dimension
The Minkowski dimension is similar to the Hausdorff dimension, except that it is not associated with a measure. The Minkowski dimension of a set is at least as large as the Hausdorff dimension. In many situations, they are equal. However, the set of rational points in 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 defined on Borel subsets of a metric space such that and holds for some constant and for every ball in , then . A partial converse is provided by Frostman's lemma. That article also discusses another useful characterization of the Hausdorff dimension.
Behaviour under unions and products
If is a finite or countable union, then :This can be verified directly from the definition.
If and are metric spaces, then the Hausdorff dimension of their product satisfies:An example in which the inequality is strict has been constructed by J. M. Marstrand [Marstrand, J. M. The dimension of Cartesian product sets. Proc. Cambridge Philos. Soc. 50, (1954). 198--202.] . It is known that when and are Borel subsets of , the Hausdorff dimension of is bounded from above by the Hausdorff dimension of plus the upper packing dimension of . These facts are discussed in Mattila (1995).
elf-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 contractive mappings on R"n" with contraction constant "r""j" < 1. Then there is a unique "non-empty" compact set "A" such that
:
The theorem follows from Stefan Banach's contractive mapping fixed point theorem applied to the complete metric space of non-empty compact subsets of R"n" with the Hausdorff distance [ K. J. Falconer, "The Geometry of Fractal Sets", Cambridge University Press, 1985 Theorem 8.3] .
To determine the dimension of the self-similar set "A" (in certain cases), we need a technical condition called the "open set condition" on the sequence of contractions ψ"i" which is stated as follows: There is a relatively compact open set "V" such that
:
where the sets in union on the left are pairwise disjoint.
Theorem. Suppose the open set condition holds and each ψ"i" is a similitude, that is a composition of an isometry and a 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
:
Note that 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 "a""i". 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:
:
The Sierpinski gasket is self-similar. 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 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.
ee also
* List of fractals by Hausdorff dimension, some examples of deterministic fractals, random and natural fractals
Historical references
* A. S. Besicovitch, "On Linear Sets of Points of Fractional Dimensions", Mathematische Annalen 101 (1929).
* A. S. Besicovitch and H. D. Ursell, "Sets of Fractional Dimensions", Journal of the London Mathematical Society, v12 (1937). Several selections from this volume are reprinted in "Classics on Fractals",ed. Gerald A. Edgar, Addison-Wesley (1993) ISBN 0-201-58701-7 See chapters 9,10,11.
* F. Hausdorff, "Dimension und äußeres Maß", Mathematische Annalen 79(1–2) (March 1919) pp. 157–179.
Notes
References
* M. Maurice Dodson and Simon Kristensen, [http://arxiv.org/abs/math/0305399 "Hausdorff Dimension and Diophantine Approximation"] (June 12, 2003).
* W. Hurewicz and H. Wallman, "Dimension Theory", Princeton University Press, 1948.
* E. Szpilrajn, "La dimension et la mesure", Fundamenta Mathematica 28, 1937, pp 81-89.
* Citation
last1=Marstrand
first1=J. M. | title=The dimension of cartesian product sets | year=1954 | journal=Proc. Cambridge Philos. Soc.
volume=50
issue=3
pages=198–202
* Citation
last1=Mattila
first1=Pertti | title=Geometry of sets and measures in Euclidean spaces | publisher=Cambridge University Press
isbn=978-0-521-65595-8 | year=1995