Abstract Generated abstract
The paper addresses Kolmogorov’s question whether the Hausdorff length of every planar set of finite positive length is bounded by an absolute constant times its minimal linear measure. It constructs, by an iterative splitting and displacement of horizontal intervals with carefully chosen parameters, a compact planar set whose Hausdorff length remains bounded below while its images under every contraction onto a line have Lebesgue measure zero. A sequence of lemmas estimates coverings by convex domains, proves a positive lower bound for the length, and controls the measure of projected images at each finite stage. The construction therefore gives a set of finite positive length with minimal linear measure equal to zero, showing that these two notions are not commensurable.
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Mathematics
A. G. VITUSHKIN, L. D. IVANOV, M. S. MELNIKOV
INCOMMENSURABILITY OF THE MINIMAL LINEAR MEASURE WITH THE LENGTH OF A SET
(Presented by Academician A. N. Kolmogorov on 14 II 1963)
In the work of A. N. Kolmogorov \((^{1})\) the question is posed of the commensurability of the Hausdorff length of a set \(l(M)\) with the minimal linear measure of the set \(L(M)\), i.e., whether the inequality
\[ l(M)\leq C L(M) \]
holds for every set \(M\) in the plane of finite positive length, where \(C\) is a positive absolute constant. In this note an example is constructed of a set \(M\) in the plane of finite positive length and with \(L(M)=0\).*
Notation and construction of the set. \(d(M)\) is the diameter of the set \(M\); \(c(M)\) is the convex hull of the set \(M\);
\[ c(M)=\inf \sum_{\mu} d(S_\mu) \]
over all coverings \(\{S_\mu\}\) of the set \(M\) by convex domains \(S_\mu\).
Further, let \(k\) be a positive integer; \(\delta\) a positive number; \(\tau\) a number equal to 0 or 1. \(P_\tau(k,\delta,R)\) is a transformation which sends the horizontal segment \(R=\{a\leq x\leq b,\ y=c\}\) into the set consisting of \(2k\) horizontal segments of the form
\[ \left\{a+\frac{(i-1)(b-a)}{k}\leq x\leq a+\frac{(2i-1)(b-a)}{2k},\quad y=c+\delta\tau\right\}, \]
where \(i=1,2,\ldots,k\).
If the set \(M\) consists of \(m\) horizontal segments \(r_l\), then
\[ P_\tau(k,\delta,M)=\bigcup_{l=1}^{m} P_\tau(k,\delta,r_l). \]
Let
\[ M_0=\{0\leq x\leq 1,\ y=0\}, \]
\[ M(\tau_1)=P_{\tau_1}(k_0,\delta_0,M_0), \]
\[ \ldots\ldots\ldots\ldots\ldots\ldots\ldots\ldots\ldots\ldots\ldots\ldots\ldots\ldots \]
\[ M(\tau_1,\ldots,\tau_j) = P_{\tau_j}\bigl(k(\tau_1,\ldots,\tau_{j-1}),\delta(\tau_1,\ldots,\tau_{j-1}),M(\tau_1,\ldots,\tau_{j-1})\bigr). \]
Thus the set \(M(\tau_1,\ldots,\tau_j)\) consists of
\[ k_0\cdot k(\tau_1)\cdots k(\tau_1,\ldots,\tau_{j-1}) \]
horizontal segments \(r_l(\tau_1,\ldots,\tau_j)\), lying on one straight line; all of them have the same length
\[ l\bigl(r_l(\tau_1,\ldots,\tau_j)\bigr) = \frac{1}{2^j k_0\cdots k(\tau_1,\ldots,\tau_{j-1})}. \]
Denote
\[ M(\tau_1,\ldots,\tau_j)^i = \bigcup_{\tau_{j+1},\ldots,\tau_{j+i}=0;\,1} M(\tau_1,\ldots,\tau_j,\tau_{j+1},\ldots,\tau_{j+i}). \]
Let \(J_i(\tau_1,\ldots,\tau_j)\) be the number of segments in the set \(r_l(\tau_1,\ldots,\tau_j)^i\)
\[ J_i(\tau_1,\ldots,\tau_j) = 2^i \sum_{\tau_{j+1},\ldots,\tau_{j+i-1}=0;\,1} k(\tau_1,\ldots,\tau_j)\cdots k(\tau_1,\ldots,\tau_{j+i-1}), \]
Now we construct the set \(M^{N_1}\), having first imposed on the numbers
\[ k_0,\ldots,k(\tau_1,\ldots,\tau_{N_1-1}),\quad \delta_0,\ldots,\delta(\tau_1,\ldots,\tau_{N_1-1}), \]
* A. N. Kolmogorov expressed the supposition of the equality of these measures: “Es scheint mir nicht unwahrscheinlich, daß immer \(m_1(E)=\mu_1(E)\)” \((^{1})\), p. 361).
where \(\tau_1,\ldots,\tau_{N_1-1},\ \tau_{N_1}=0;\ 1\), the following conditions:
a) \(N_1J_{N_1-1}(0)\leq k(1)\),
\[ \cdot\ \cdot\ \cdot\ \cdot\ \cdot\ \cdot\ \cdot\ \cdot\ \cdot\ \cdot\ \cdot\ \cdot\ \cdot\ \cdot\ \cdot \]
\[ N_1J_{N_1-j}(\tau_1,\ldots,\tau_{j-1},0)\leq k(\tau_1,\ldots,\tau_{j-1},1). \]
\[ j=1,\ldots,N_1-1; \]
b) \(N_1\delta_0\leq l(r_l(\tau_1))\),
\[ \cdot\ \cdot\ \cdot\ \cdot\ \cdot\ \cdot\ \cdot\ \cdot\ \cdot\ \cdot\ \cdot\ \cdot\ \cdot \]
\[ N_1\delta(\tau_1,\ldots,\tau_{j-1})\leq l(r_l(\tau_1,\ldots,\tau_j)). \]
\[ j=1,\ldots,N_1; \]
c) \(\delta_0\geq 2^3l(r_l(\tau_1,\tau_2))\),
\[ \cdot\ \cdot\ \cdot\ \cdot\ \cdot\ \cdot\ \cdot\ \cdot\ \cdot\ \cdot\ \cdot\ \cdot\ \cdot \]
\[ \delta(\tau_1,\ldots,\tau_{j-1})\geq 2^{j+2}l(r_l(\tau_1,\ldots,\tau_j,\tau_{j+1})) \]
\[ j=1,\ldots,N_1-1. \]
Thus, we have constructed the set \(M^{N_1}\), consisting of a finite number \(J_{N_1}\) of intervals \(r_l(\tau_1,\ldots,\tau_{N_1})\). Now we construct the set \(M^{N_1N_2}\), applying to each interval in \(M^{N_1}\) the operation \(P_\tau\) \(N_2\) times with the same conditions a), b), only for the number \(N_2\), while in condition c) we increase the exponents of the power of \(2\) by \(N_1\): \(\delta_0^1\geq 2^{3+N_1}l(r_l(\tau_1,\tau_2))\). By \(\delta^\nu(\tau_1,\ldots,\tau_j)\), \(k^\nu(\tau_1,\ldots,\tau_j)\) are denoted the numbers \(\delta,k\) for the \((\nu+1)\)-st step of the construction. Further, applying to each interval of the set \(M^{N_1N_2}\) the operation \(P_\tau\) \(N_3\) times, with in condition c) the numbers \(\delta^2(\tau_1,\ldots,\tau_j)\) involving exponents of the form \(3+N_1+N_2,\ 4+N_1+N_2,\ldots,\ N_3+N_2+N_1+1\), we construct the set \(M^{N_1N_2N_3}\), and so on. We obtain the set \(M^{N_1\cdots N_k}\). Thus, let a sequence of natural numbers \(N_1,\ldots,N_k,\ldots\) be given, the growth conditions on which will be imposed below; then
\[ M=\lim_{k\to\infty} M^{N_1\cdots N_k}. \]
Lemma 1. Let \(\bar d(E)=\sup\max\{|x_2-x_1|,\ |y_2-y_1|\}\) over all \(\{x_1,y_1\},\ \{x_2,y_2\}\in E;\ S\) be a set. Then
\[ \left(2+\frac{1}{2^j}+\cdots+\frac{1}{2^{j+i+1}}\right)\bar d(S)\geq l\bigl(S\cap M(\tau_1,\ldots,\tau_j)^i\bigr); \]
\[ j=0,1,\ldots;\quad i=0,1,\ldots . \]
Lemma 2. The coverings of the set \(M^{N_1}\) and of the sets \(M^{N_1\cdots N_n}\), where \(n=1,2,\ldots\),
\[ c(M^{N_1})\geq \frac{1}{4\sqrt2}; \qquad c(M^{N_1\cdots N_n})\geq \frac{1}{4\sqrt2}. \]
This lemma follows at once from Lemma 1, taking into account that \(d(S)\geq \frac1{\sqrt2}\bar d(S)\), since condition c) for \(M^{N_1\cdots N_n}\) coincides with condition c) for \(M^{N_1+\cdots+N_n}\).
Lemma 3. The length of the set \(M\)
\[ l(M)\geq \frac{1}{4\sqrt2}. \]
The lemma follows immediately from Lemma 2:
\[ l(M)\geq c\left(\lim_{k\to\infty}M^{N_1,\ldots,N_k}\right)\geq \lim_{k\to\infty}c\left(M^{N_1\cdots N_k}\right)\geq \frac{1}{4\sqrt2}. \]
Lemma 4. For any contraction mapping \(f\) of the set \(M^i\) onto a straight line, the measure of the image
\[ \operatorname{mes}(f(M^i))\leq \frac{20}{i}\,l(M^i),\quad \text{where } i\leq N_1. \]
We prove this by induction on \(i\). For \(i\leq 20\) the assertion of the lemma is obvious. Suppose the lemma is true for all \(M^i,\ i=1,2,\ldots,n\leq N_1\).
We note that
\[ M^{n+1}=M(0)^n \bigcup M(1)^n,\qquad f(M^{n+1})=f(M(0)^n)\bigcup f(M(1)^n), \]
then
\[ \operatorname{mes}(f(M^{n+1}))=\operatorname{mes}(f(M(0)^n))+\operatorname{mes}(f(M(1)^n))- \]
\[ -\operatorname{mes}\bigl(f(M(0)^n)\cap f(M(1)^n)\bigr). \tag{1} \]
- If
\[ \operatorname{mes}(f(M(0)^n))\leq \frac{9}{10}\frac{20}{n}\,l(M(0)^n), \]
then, since
\[ l(M(0)^n)=l(M(1)^n)=\frac12 l(M^{n+1})=\frac12, \]
we obtain
\[ \operatorname{mes}(f(M^{n+1}))\leq \frac{9}{10}\frac{20}{n}\frac12+\frac{20}{n}\frac12 \leq \frac{20}{n+1}\,l(M^{n+1}), \]
since \(n>20\).
- Let
\[ \operatorname{mes}(f(M(0)^n))>\frac{9}{10}\frac{20}{n}\,l(M(0)^n)=\frac{9}{n}. \]
The set \(f(M(0)^n)\) on the line consists of no more than \(k_0J_n(0)\) intervals or points, since \(f(M(0)^n)\) is a contracted image of the set \(M(0)^n\), which consists of the same number of intervals.
Let
\[ A_p=\inf(f(r_p(0)^n)),\qquad A'_p=\inf(f(r_p(1)^n)), \]
\[ B_p=\sup(f(r_p(0)^n)),\qquad B'_p=\sup(f(r_p(1)^n)); \]
then, since the distance from \(r_p(0)^n\) to \(r_p(1)^n\) is equal to \(\delta_0\),
\[ |A'_p-A_p|\leq \delta_0,\qquad |B'_p-B_p|\leq \delta_0, \]
i.e.
\[ \operatorname{mes}\bigl(f(r_p(0)^n)\cap A'_pB'_p\bigr)\geq \operatorname{mes}(f(r_p(0)^n))-2\delta_0. \tag{2} \]
Further,
\[ f(M(1)^n)=\bigcup_{p=1}^{k_0} f(r_p(1)^n) = \bigcup_{p=1}^{k_0}\bigcup_{l=1}^{k(1)} f\bigl(r_{pl}(1,0)^{\,n-1}\cup r_{pl}(1,1)^{\,n-1}\bigr). \]
Since the distance between two neighboring subsets of the form
\(f(r_{pl}(1,0)^{\,n-1}\cup r_{pl}(1,1)^{\,n-1})\), of which the set \(f(r_p(1)^n)\) consists, is not greater than
\(l(r_{pl}(1,0))=l(M(1)^n)/2k_0k(1)\), it follows that into any interval \(CD:\ A'_p\leq C\leq D\leq B'_p\) there fall no fewer than
\(|D-C|/2l(r_{pl}(1,0))-1\) of these subsets. It is easy to see that into two intersecting intervals \(CD, EF:\ C<E<D<F\),
\(A'_{p_1}\leq C<D\leq B'_{p_1}\) and \(A'_{p_2}\leq E<F\leq B'_{p_2}\), there fall no fewer than
\(|C-F|/2l(r_{pl}(1,0))-2\) of these subsets. Hence, taking account of (2) and of the fact that the set \(f(r_p(0)^n)\) consists of no more than \(J_n(0)\) intervals, we obtain that this set \(f(r_p(0)^n)\) “covers” no fewer than
\[ \frac{\operatorname{mes}(f(r_p(0)^n))-2\delta_0}{2l(r_{pl}(1,0))} \]
\[ -\,J_n(0) \]
subsets of the form
\(f(r_{pl}(1,0)^{\,n-1}\cup r_{pl}(1,1)^{\,n-1})\).
This means that all of \(f(M(0)^n)\) “covers” no fewer than
\[ \frac{\operatorname{mes}(f(M(0)^n))-2\delta_0k_0}{2l(r_{pl}(1,0))} -k_0J_n(0) \geq \frac{\frac{9}{10}\frac{20}{n}\,l(M(0)^n)-2\delta_0k_0}{2l(r_{pl}(1,0))} -k_0J_n(0) \tag{3} \]
of these subsets. Taking (1), (3) into account, and
\[ \operatorname{mes}\left(f\left(r_{pl}(1,0)^{\,n-1}\cup r_{pl}(1,1)^{\,n-1}\right)\right) \leq \frac{2\cdot 20}{n-1}\, l\left(r_{pl}(1,0)\right), \]
we have
\[ \begin{aligned} \operatorname{mes}\left(f\left(M^{n+1}\right)\right) &\leq \frac{20}{n}\,\frac12+\frac{20}{n-1}\cdot 2l\left(r_{pl}(1,0)\right)\times\\ &\quad \times\left[ k_0k(1)-\frac{\frac{9}{n}\,l\left(M(0)^n\right)-k_0\delta_0}{l\left(r_{pl}(1,0)\right)} +k_0J_n(0) \right] \\ &= \frac{20}{n}\,\frac12+\frac{20}{n-1}\,\frac12 -\frac{20\cdot 9}{(n-1)n} +\frac{40}{n-1}\,\delta_0 k_0 +\frac{40}{n-1}\,l\left(r_{pl}(1,0)\right)k_0J_n(0). \end{aligned} \]
From a) it follows that \(l(r_{pl}(1,0))k_0J_n(0)\leq 1/N_1\); from b) it follows that \(2\delta_0k_0\leq 1/N_1\), whence
\[ \operatorname{mes}\left(f\left(M^{n+1}\right)\right) \leq \frac{10}{n}+\frac{10}{n-1}+\frac{20}{(n-1)N_1} +\frac{40}{(n-1)N_1} -\frac{180}{n(n-1)} \leq \frac{20}{n+1}, \]
where \(20<n\leq N_1\), as was required.
We now return to the conditions on the growth of the sequence \(N_1,N_2,\ldots,N_k,\ldots\). Let a sequence of positive \(\varepsilon_1,\varepsilon_2,\ldots,\varepsilon_k,\ldots\), tending to zero, be given. It follows from Lemma 4 that if only \(N_1>20\cdot 4/\varepsilon_1\), then for any contracted mapping \(f\) onto a line
\(\operatorname{mes}(f(M^{N_1}))\leq \varepsilon_1/4\). Denote by \(\overline E_{\sigma_1}\) the \(\sigma_1\)-extension of the set \(E\). Since the set \(M^{N_1}\) consists of a finite number of intervals \(J_{N_1}\), for \(\sigma_1>0\) and \(4J_{N_1}\sigma_1<\varepsilon_1\) the measure of the \(\sigma_1\)-extension of the image of the set \(M^{N_1}\)
\[ \operatorname{mes}\left(\overline{f\left(M^{N_1}\right)}_{\sigma_1}\right)<\varepsilon_1. \]
Next, choose
\[ N_2>\max\left\{\frac{J_{N_1}\cdot 80}{\varepsilon_2},\,\frac{1}{2\sigma_1}\right\}; \]
it is immediately clear that \(\operatorname{mes}(f(M^{N_1N_2}))<\varepsilon_2/4\) for any contracted mapping \(f\).
Find \(\sigma_2<\frac14\sigma_1\) and
\[ \operatorname{mes}\left(\overline{f\left(M^{N_1N_2}\right)}_{\sigma_2}\right)\leq \varepsilon_2, \]
and so on.
In general, the condition on the growth of \(N_1,\ldots,N_k,\ldots\) is
\[ \text{g)}\quad N_k>\max\left\{ \frac{J_{N_1\ldots N_{k-1}}\cdot 80}{\varepsilon_k},\, \frac{1}{2\cdot\sigma_{k-1}} \right\}. \]
Lemma 5. Let
\[ M=\lim_{k\to\infty} M^{N_1\ldots N_k}, \]
where the sequence \(N_1,\ldots,N_k,\ldots\) satisfies condition g). Then \(\operatorname{mes}(f(M))=0\) for any contracted mapping \(f\) onto a line.
Since \(N_k\leq \dfrac{1}{2\sigma_{k-1}}\), it follows, by condition b), that
\[ \delta_0^k\leq \frac{1}{2N_k}\leq \frac14\sigma_{k-1}, \qquad \delta_0^{k+1}\leq \frac14\sigma_k\leq \frac1{16}\sigma_{k-1}; \]
then the maximal deviation of the set \(M^{N_1\ldots N_k}\) from \(M^{N_1\ldots N_{k-1}}\) is less than \(\frac12\sigma_{k-1}\), and that of the set \(M^{N_1\ldots N_{k+1}}\) from \(M^{N_1\ldots N_{k-1}}\) is less than \((\frac12+\frac14)\sigma_{k-1}\), and, in general,
\[ M\subset \left(M^{N_1\ldots N_{k-1}}\right)_{\sigma_{k-1}}. \]
But
\[ \operatorname{mes}\left(\overline{f\left(M^{N_1\ldots N_{k-1}}\right)}_{\sigma_{k-1}}\right)\leq \varepsilon_{k-1}. \]
Hence, by Whitney’s theorem on the extension of a function with Lipschitz condition with constant 1 on the set \(M\) to the whole plane with Lipschitz constant \(C\), it follows that for any contracted mapping onto a line
\[ \operatorname{mes}(f(M))\leq C\varepsilon_{k-1},\qquad \text{i.e.}\quad \operatorname{mes}(f(M))=0. \]
It follows from Lemmas 3 and 5 that for the set \(M\) the length \(l(M)\) and the minimal linear measure \(L(M)\) are incommensurable.
Received
24 X 1962
CITED LITERATURE
- A. N. Kolmogoroff, Math. Ann., 107, 351 (1932).