Papers
Topics
Authors
Recent
Search
2000 character limit reached

Equi-homogeneity, Assouad Dimension and Non-autonomous Dynamics

Published 16 Sep 2014 in math.CA and math.DS | (1409.4659v2)

Abstract: We show that self-similar sets arising from iterated function systems that satisfy the Moran open-set condition, a canonical class of fractal sets, are equi-homogeneous'. This is a regularity property that, roughly speaking, means that at each fixed length-scale any two neighbourhoods of the set have covers of approximately equal cardinality. Self-similar sets are notable in that they are Ahlfors-David regular, which implies that their Assouad and box-counting dimensions coincide. More generally, attractors of non-autonomous iterated functions systems (where maps are allowed to vary between iterations) can have distinct Assouad and box-counting dimensions. Consequently the familiar notion of Ahlfors-David regularity is too strong to be useful in the analysis of this important class of sets, which include generalised Cantor sets and possess different dimensional behaviour at different length-scales. We further develop the theory of equi-homogeneity showing that it is a weaker property than Ahlfors-David regularity and distinct from any previously defined notion of dimensional equivalence. However, we show that if the upper and lower box-counting dimensions of an equi-homogeneous set are equal andattained' in a sense we make precise then the lower Assouad, Hausdorff, packing, lower box-counting, upper box-counting and Assouad dimensions coincide. Our main results provide conditions under which the attractor of a non-autonomous iterated function system is equi-homogeneous and we use this to compute the Assouad dimension of a certain class of these highly non-trivial sets.

Summary

Paper to Video (Beta)

Whiteboard

No one has generated a whiteboard explanation for this paper yet.

Open Problems

We haven't generated a list of open problems mentioned in this paper yet.

Continue Learning

We haven't generated follow-up questions for this paper yet.

Collections

Sign up for free to add this paper to one or more collections.