In this paper, it is written that Alberti’s rank says that the singular part $D^s u$ with respect to $\mathcal L^d$ of the distributional derivative $Du$ of a function $u \in BV_{loc}(\mathbb R^d; \mathbb R^m )$ can be written, in polar decomposition, as $D^s u = \xi \otimes \eta|D^s u|$.
Then "by a standard blow-up argument this implies that near to $|D^s u|$-a.e. point $x$ asymptotically $u(y)$ behaves like a function having a single non-zero component, parallel to $\eta(x) \in \mathbb{S}^{m-1}$, and depending on a single scalar variable, the component of $y$ along $\xi(x) \in \mathbb{S}^{d-1}$".
- What does the statement in quotes mean heuristically?
- How can it be proved rigorously (that is, could you outline the details of the "standard blow-up argument" mentioned above?
- Where can I find a picture to represent this situation?
A more generic question was asked in Meaning of Alberti rank-one theorem. A related issue is in Alberti rank-one theorem and reduction of the study of BV function to the two-dimensional case.