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I use $\dim_H(E)$ to denote the Hausdorff dimension of a set $E \subseteq \mathbb{R}$ and $|E|$ to denote its Lebesgue measure. It is easy to see from the definition of Hausdorff dimension that if $\dim_H(E) < 1$, then $|E| = 0$. The converse is not true, and there are many cases where $\dim_H(E) = 1$ yet $|E| = 0$. So the question:

What was the first (or most elementary) example of this phenomenon?

After some looking around, I was able to prove that a central Cantor set $C$ with ratio of dissection $r_k = 1/(2+\frac{1}{k})$ satisfies the condition I want. It is easy to see that $|C| = 0$ since at step $n$ of the process to construct this Cantor set, it has measure $2^n(r_1 \cdots r_n)$ which in this case limits to 0, but for the Hausdorff dimension I required a non-trivial result from the paper Sums of Cantor sets (Cabrelli, Hare, Molter) that gave the formula

$\dim_H(C) = \liminf_n \frac{n \ln 2}{\ln r_1 \cdots r_n}$.

This result is fairly recent and sophisticated, and I feel that there should be older and simpler examples.

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4 Answers 4

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Try a countable union of sets (such as Cantor sets) whose Hausdorff dimension tends to 1.

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  • $\begingroup$ Thank you! I was mired in the idea that individual Cantor sets can never have Hausdorff dimension 1, but of course one can appeal to countable stability. $\endgroup$
    – Vince
    Commented Aug 18, 2010 at 20:13
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Perhaps Hausdorff's original paper? He uses gauge functions other than powers of x. And constructs Cantor sets corresponding to them. For example if you take $x |\log x|$ then you get a set of Hausdorff dimension $1$ but measure $0$.

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It is a very common phenomenon in ergodic theory when the set of points which do not satisfy the Birkhoff ergodic theorem (i.e., a set of zero measure) has full Hausdorff dimension.

See, for instance, http://www.math.psu.edu/pesin/papers_www/birk.pdf

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Perhaps the following charts "Universal measure zero sets with full Hausdorff dimension" http://mat.fsv.cvut.cz/Zindulka/papers/opava.pdf are of interest for you.

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