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Menger curvature

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In mathematics, the Menger curvature of a triple of points in n-dimensional Euclidean space R is the reciprocal of the radius of the circle that passes through the three points. It is named after the Austrian-American mathematician Karl Menger.

Definition

Let x, y and z be three points in R; for simplicity, assume for the moment that all three points are distinct and do not lie on a single straight line. Let Π ⊆ R be the Euclidean plane spanned by x, y and z and let C ⊆ Π be the unique Euclidean circle in Π that passes through x, y and z (the circumcircle of x, y and z). Let R be the radius of C. Then the Menger curvature c(xyz) of x, y and z is defined by

c ( x , y , z ) = 1 R . {\displaystyle c(x,y,z)={\frac {1}{R}}.}

If the three points are collinear, R can be informally considered to be +∞, and it makes rigorous sense to define c(xyz) = 0. If any of the points x, y and z are coincident, again define c(xyz) = 0.

Using the well-known formula relating the side lengths of a triangle to its area, it follows that

c ( x , y , z ) = 1 R = 4 A | x y | | y z | | z x | , {\displaystyle c(x,y,z)={\frac {1}{R}}={\frac {4A}{|x-y||y-z||z-x|}},}

where A denotes the area of the triangle spanned by x, y and z.

Another way of computing Menger curvature is the identity

c ( x , y , z ) = 2 sin x y z | x z | {\displaystyle c(x,y,z)={\frac {2\sin \angle xyz}{|x-z|}}}

where x y z {\displaystyle \angle xyz} is the angle made at the y-corner of the triangle spanned by x,y,z.

Menger curvature may also be defined on a general metric space. If X is a metric space and x,y, and z are distinct points, let f be an isometry from { x , y , z } {\displaystyle \{x,y,z\}} into R 2 {\displaystyle \mathbb {R} ^{2}} . Define the Menger curvature of these points to be

c X ( x , y , z ) = c ( f ( x ) , f ( y ) , f ( z ) ) . {\displaystyle c_{X}(x,y,z)=c(f(x),f(y),f(z)).}

Note that f need not be defined on all of X, just on {x,y,z}, and the value cX (x,y,z) is independent of the choice of f.

Integral Curvature Rectifiability

Menger curvature can be used to give quantitative conditions for when sets in R n {\displaystyle \mathbb {R} ^{n}} may be rectifiable. For a Borel measure μ {\displaystyle \mu } on a Euclidean space R n {\displaystyle \mathbb {R} ^{n}} define

c p ( μ ) = c ( x , y , z ) p d μ ( x ) d μ ( y ) d μ ( z ) . {\displaystyle c^{p}(\mu )=\int \int \int c(x,y,z)^{p}d\mu (x)d\mu (y)d\mu (z).}
  • A Borel set E R n {\displaystyle E\subseteq \mathbb {R} ^{n}} is rectifiable if c 2 ( H 1 | E ) < {\displaystyle c^{2}(H^{1}|_{E})<\infty } , where H 1 | E {\displaystyle H^{1}|_{E}} denotes one-dimensional Hausdorff measure restricted to the set E {\displaystyle E} .

The basic intuition behind the result is that Menger curvature measures how straight a given triple of points are (the smaller c ( x , y , z ) max { | x y | , | y z | , | z y | } {\displaystyle c(x,y,z)\max\{|x-y|,|y-z|,|z-y|\}} is, the closer x,y, and z are to being collinear), and this integral quantity being finite is saying that the set E is flat on most small scales. In particular, if the power in the integral is larger, our set is smoother than just being rectifiable

  • Let p > 3 {\displaystyle p>3} , f : S 1 R n {\displaystyle f:S^{1}\rightarrow \mathbb {R} ^{n}} be a homeomorphism and Γ = f ( S 1 ) {\displaystyle \Gamma =f(S^{1})} . Then f C 1 , 1 3 p ( S 1 ) {\displaystyle f\in C^{1,1-{\frac {3}{p}}}(S^{1})} if c p ( H 1 | Γ ) < {\displaystyle c^{p}(H^{1}|_{\Gamma })<\infty } .
  • If 0 < H s ( E ) < {\displaystyle 0<H^{s}(E)<\infty } where 0 < s 1 2 {\displaystyle 0<s\leq {\frac {1}{2}}} , and c 2 s ( H s | E ) < {\displaystyle c^{2s}(H^{s}|_{E})<\infty } , then E {\displaystyle E} is rectifiable in the sense that there are countably many C 1 {\displaystyle C^{1}} curves Γ i {\displaystyle \Gamma _{i}} such that H s ( E Γ i ) = 0 {\displaystyle H^{s}(E\backslash \bigcup \Gamma _{i})=0} . The result is not true for 1 2 < s < 1 {\displaystyle {\frac {1}{2}}<s<1} , and c 2 s ( H s | E ) = {\displaystyle c^{2s}(H^{s}|_{E})=\infty } for 1 < s n {\displaystyle 1<s\leq n} .:

In the opposite direction, there is a result of Peter Jones:

  • If E Γ R 2 {\displaystyle E\subseteq \Gamma \subseteq \mathbb {R} ^{2}} , H 1 ( E ) > 0 {\displaystyle H^{1}(E)>0} , and Γ {\displaystyle \Gamma } is rectifiable. Then there is a positive Radon measure μ {\displaystyle \mu } supported on E {\displaystyle E} satisfying μ B ( x , r ) r {\displaystyle \mu B(x,r)\leq r} for all x E {\displaystyle x\in E} and r > 0 {\displaystyle r>0} such that c 2 ( μ ) < {\displaystyle c^{2}(\mu )<\infty } (in particular, this measure is the Frostman measure associated to E). Moreover, if H 1 ( B ( x , r ) Γ ) C r {\displaystyle H^{1}(B(x,r)\cap \Gamma )\leq Cr} for some constant C and all x Γ {\displaystyle x\in \Gamma } and r>0, then c 2 ( H 1 | E ) < {\displaystyle c^{2}(H^{1}|_{E})<\infty } . This last result follows from the Analyst's Traveling Salesman Theorem.

Analogous results hold in general metric spaces:

See also

External links

References

  1. Leger, J. (1999). "Menger curvature and rectifiability" (PDF). Annals of Mathematics. 149 (3): 831–869. arXiv:math/9905212. doi:10.2307/121074. JSTOR 121074. S2CID 216176.
  2. Strzelecki, Paweł; Szumańska, Marta; von der Mosel, Heiko (2010). "Regularizing and self-avoidance effects of integral Menger curvature". Annali della Scuola Normale Superiore di Pisa - Classe di Scienze. 9 (1): 145–187.
  3. Lin, Yong; Mattila, Pertti (2000). "Menger curvature and C regularity of fractals" (PDF). Proceedings of the American Mathematical Society. 129 (6): 1755–1762. doi:10.1090/s0002-9939-00-05814-7.
  4. Pajot, H. (2000). Analytic Capacity, Rectifiability, Menger Curvature and the Cauchy Integral. Springer. ISBN 3-540-00001-1.
  5. Schul, Raanan (2007). "Ahlfors-regular curves in metric spaces" (PDF). Annales Academiae Scientiarum Fennicae. 32: 437–460.
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