Star body
with respect to a point , star-like body
An open set in
-dimensional Euclidean space
which has the ray property (relative to
): If
, where
is the closure of
, then the entire segment
(where
,
) lies in
. A star body
with centre
may be characterized as follows:
is an interior point of
; every ray emanating from
lies either entirely in
or contains a point
such that the ray segment
lies in
, but the ray segment
lies outside
. This definition is equivalent to the first one, up to points on the boundary of
. A star body is a particular case of a star set with respect to
, a set with the generalized ray property relative to
: If
, then the entire segment
lies in
. A particular case of a star body is a convex body.
With every star body with respect to the origin
one can associate, in one-to-one fashion, a ray function
such that
is the set of points
with
.
The correspondence is defined by the formula
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With this notation a star body is bounded if and only if
is a positive ray function; it is convex if and only if
is a convex ray function.
References
[1] | J.W.S. Cassels, "An introduction to the geometry of numbers" , Springer (1972) |
Comments
Star bodies play an important role in the geometry of numbers, e.g. the Minkowski–Hlawka theorem.
A set in
is centrally symmetric if
implies
.
The Minkowski–Hlawka theorem says that for a centrally-symmetric star body
. Here,
is the critical determinant of
(cf. Geometry of numbers),
is the volume of
and
. This is an inequality in the opposite direction of the Minkowski convex body theorem (cf. Minkowski theorem).
References
[a1] | P.M. Gruber, C.G. Lekkerkerker, "Geometry of numbers" , North-Holland (1987) pp. Sect. (iv) (Updated reprint) |
[a2] | P. Erdös, P.M. Gruber, J. Hammer, "Lattice points" , Longman (1989) |
Star body. Encyclopedia of Mathematics. URL: http://encyclopediaofmath.org/index.php?title=Star_body&oldid=11275