Hausdorff dimension
A numerical invariant of metric spaces, introduced by F. Hausdorff in [1]. Let be a metric space. For real
and
, let
, where the lower bound is taken over all countable coverings
of
for which
. The Hausdorff dimension of
is defined as
, where
. The number thus defined depends on the metric on
(on this, see also Metric dimension) and is, generally speaking, not an integer (for example, the Hausdorff dimension of the Cantor set is
). A topological invariant is, for example, the lower bound of the Hausdorff dimensions over all metrics on a given topological space
; when
is compact, this invariant is the same as the Lebesgue dimension of
.
References
[1] | F. Hausdorff, "Dimension and äusseres Mass" Math. Ann. , 79 (1918) pp. 157–179 |
[2] | W. Hurevicz, G. Wallman, "Dimension theory" , Princeton Univ. Press (1948) |
Comments
The limit of the non-decreasing set
is called the Hausdorff measure of
in dimension
. There is then a unique
in the extended real line
such that
for
and
for
. This real number is the Hausdorff dimension of
. It is also called the Hausdorff–Besicovitch dimension.
See also (the editorial comments to) Hausdorff measure for more material and references. The Hausdorff dimension is a basic notion in the theory of fractals, cf. also [a1].
References
[a1] | K.J. Falconer, "The geometry of fractal sets" , Cambridge Univ. Press (1985) |
Hausdorff dimension. Encyclopedia of Mathematics. URL: http://encyclopediaofmath.org/index.php?title=Hausdorff_dimension&oldid=11884