Minkowski content

Today, Minkowski content is a topic that has gained relevance in various areas of society. Whether in the political, social, economic or technological sphere, Minkowski content has become a constant topic of conversation. For several years now, Minkowski content has been at the center of debates and has generated mixed opinions. However, as time progresses, it is evident that Minkowski content continues to be a very important issue that deserves to be analyzed in detail. In this article, we will explore different aspects related to Minkowski content and examine its impact on the world today.

The Minkowski content (named after Hermann Minkowski), or the boundary measure, of a set is a basic concept that uses concepts from geometry and measure theory to generalize the notions of length of a smooth curve in the plane, and area of a smooth surface in space, to arbitrary measurable sets.

It is typically applied to fractal boundaries of domains in the Euclidean space, but it can also be used in the context of general metric measure spaces.

It is related to, although different from, the Hausdorff measure.

Definition

For , and each integer m with , the m-dimensional upper Minkowski content is

and the m-dimensional lower Minkowski content is defined as

where is the volume of the (nm)-ball of radius r and is an -dimensional Lebesgue measure.

If the upper and lower m-dimensional Minkowski content of A are equal, then their common value is called the Minkowski content Mm(A).[1][2]

Properties

  • The Minkowski content is (generally) not a measure. In particular, the m-dimensional Minkowski content in Rn is not a measure unless m = 0, in which case it is the counting measure. Indeed, clearly the Minkowski content assigns the same value to the set A as well as its closure.
  • If A is a closed m-rectifiable set in Rn, given as the image of a bounded set from Rm under a Lipschitz function, then the m-dimensional Minkowski content of A exists, and is equal to the m-dimensional Hausdorff measure of A.[3]

See also

Footnotes

  1. ^ Federer 1969, p. 273
  2. ^ Krantz & Parks 1999, p. 74
  3. ^ Federer 1969, p. 275, Theorem 3.2.39

References

  • Federer, Herbert (1969), Geometric Measure Theory, Springer-Verlag, ISBN 3-540-60656-4.
  • Krantz, Steven G.; Parks, Harold R. (1999), The geometry of domains in space, Birkhäuser Advanced Texts: Basler Lehrbücher, Boston, MA: Birkhäuser Boston, Inc., ISBN 0-8176-4097-5, MR 1730695.