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Questions tagged [metric-spaces]

A metric space is a pair $(X,d)$, where $X$ is a set and $d:X \times X \to \mathbb{R}$ satisfies the following conditions for all $x,y,z \in X$. (Symmetry) $d(x,y)=d(y,x)$. (Identity of Indiscernibles) $d(x,y)=0$ if and only if $x=y$. (Triangle Inequality) $d(x,y)+d(y,z) \geq d(x,z)$.

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$\omega$-homogenous space which is not $\omega_1$-homogenous

Consider a metric space $(X,d)$ and let $\kappa$ be a cardinal. We say that $(X,d)$ is $\kappa$-homogenous, if every (surjective) isometry $h:X_1 \to X_2$ between subspaces of $(X,d)$ of size $< \...
Reijo Jaakkola's user avatar
2 votes
3 answers
299 views

Banach-like analysis on metric spaces

Some time ago, I was thinking about whether it would be possible to generalize some results from functional analysis on Banach spaces to some metric spaces. Specifically, I wondered whether if one ...
Kacper Kurowski's user avatar
1 vote
0 answers
450 views

Portmanteau theorem for finite signed Borel measures

Let $X$ be a metric space, $\mathcal M(X)$ the space of all finite signed Borel measures on $X$, $\mathcal M_+(X)$ the space of all finite nonnegative Borel measures on $X$, $\mathcal M_1(X)$ the ...
Analyst's user avatar
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0 votes
1 answer
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Prove that $(v^Tx)^2-(u^Tx)^2 < 1-(u^Tv)^2$ for any unit vectors $u$, $v$, $x$

Let $u,v,x \in \mathbb R^d$ be three unit vectors. I found a very complicated proof that $(v^Tx)^2-(u^Tx)^2 \leq 1-(u^Tv)^2$. That is $\lVert uu^T-vv^T\rVert^2_2 = 1-(u^Tv)^2$, or that $f(v,x)\leq f(v,...
Dan Feldman's user avatar
6 votes
2 answers
297 views

Can every set of points with rational distance squares be isometrically embedded in $\Bbb Q^d$?

Suppose we are given a finite family of points $p_1,...,p_n\in \Bbb R^d$, so that any two points have a rational distance square, that is, $$\|p_i-p_j\|^2\in\Bbb Q,\quad\text{for all $i,j\in\{1,...,n\}...
M. Winter's user avatar
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3 votes
0 answers
115 views

Isometric embeddings of $c_0$ into metric spaces

Are there any nice and useful criteria or theorems which assert when a given metric space $M$ contains an isometric (not necessarily linear) copy of the Banach space $c_0$ or its unit ball $B_{c_0}$? (...
Damian Sobota's user avatar
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1 answer
55 views

Get an estimate on $L^{2}(0,1)$ [closed]

Consider $f \in L^{2}(0,1)$ and $g \in L^{\infty}(0,1)$ such that $ \text{lim} ~g(x) = 0 \ \ \text{when} \ \ x \to 0^{+};$ $g(x) > 0 \ \forall x \in (0,1)$; $\text{lim}~\dfrac{g(x)}{x^{\alpha}} =...
André mash's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
124 views

A neighborhood $Y$ of a set $X$ such that the line segment connecting any point in $Y$ and its projection to $X$ is contained in $Y$

A direct line from a point $p$ to a set $X$ is a line segment with one endpoint at $p$ and one endpoint in $X$, which is as short as any other line segment from $p$ to $X$. Given a closed set $X$ and ...
ccriscitiello's user avatar
36 votes
2 answers
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Is there a "universal" connected compact metric space?

Fact 1. The Cantor set $K$ is "universal" among nonempty compact metric spaces in the following sense: given any nonempty compact metric space $X$, there exists a continuous surjection $f\colon K \to ...
John Baez's user avatar
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Do all manifolds admit metrics with Euclidean balls?

Let $M$ be a compact topological n-manifold. Suppose we are given a locally flat embedding $M \subset \mathbb{R}^{n+k}$. This induces a metric on $M$ by restriction. Is it true that for $\epsilon$ ...
Connor Malin's user avatar
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7 votes
0 answers
493 views

A locally compact, complete metric space in which the closure of open balls coincide with the closed ball is Heine-Borel

I saw the following result stated without a proof in a paper about the isometry group of metric measure spaces: Let $X$ be a locally compact, complete metric space such that for all $x \in X$ and $R &...
Kaitei's user avatar
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1 vote
1 answer
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When are Wasserstein spaces $CAT(\kappa)$?

Let $(X,d)$ be a complete and separable metric space and, for $1\leq p<\infty$, let $(\mathcal{P}_p(X,d),W_p)$ be the $p$-Wasserstein space on $(X,d)$. For which $p$ and $(X,d)$ is $(\mathcal{P}_p(...
Carlos_Petterson's user avatar
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0 answers
113 views

Finite sets are residual in the Hausdorff space

Let $X$ be a metric space, let $\mathbb{H}(X)$ denote the set of non-empty closed subsets of $X$ with Hausdorff metric which we denote by $d_{\mathbb{H}(X)}$, and let $\mathbb{H}_{\operatorname{fin}}(...
ABIM's user avatar
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3 votes
1 answer
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Completeness of intrinsication

Lemma. Suppose $(X,\rho)$ is a complete metric space and $\hat \rho$ is its induced intrinsic metric. Then $(X,\hat \rho)$ is complete. This lemma was essentially proved in [2.3. in Metric minimizing ...
Anton Petrunin's user avatar
2 votes
0 answers
150 views

A version of Portmanteau theorem where $(\mu_n)_{n\in \mathbb N}$ is replaced by a net $(\mu_d)_{d\in D}$

Let $(E, d)$ be a metric space, $\mathcal C_b(E)$ the space of all real-valued bounded continuous functions on $E$, and $\mathcal P(E)$ the space of all Borel probability measures on $E$. For $f \in \...
Analyst's user avatar
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1 vote
0 answers
238 views

Example of CAT($k$) space [closed]

Good time of day. I repeat the question from MSE (https://math.stackexchange.com/questions/4464888/question-about-example-of-catk-space) because no response has been received.Question is the following:...
UserIn's user avatar
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7 votes
1 answer
590 views

When is a metric space a snowflake?

Let $(X,d)$ be a metric space. For any $0<\epsilon<1$, we call the metric space $(X,d^{\epsilon})$; where $d^{\epsilon}(x,y)\triangleq (d(x,y))^{\epsilon}$ the $\epsilon$-snowflake of $(X,d)$. ...
Bernard_Karkanidis's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
109 views

When are uniform embeddings quasisymetric

Let $X,Y$ be metric space and suppose that $f:X\rightarrow Y$ is a uniform embedding; i.e.: $$ \omega(d_X(x,z))\leq d_Y(f(x),f(z)) \leq \Omega(d_X(x,z)), $$ where $\omega\leq \Omega$ are both strictly ...
Carlos_Petterson's user avatar
6 votes
0 answers
182 views

Factorization of metric space-valued maps through vector-valued Sobolev spaces

Let $(X,d,m)$ and $(Y,\rho,n)$ be metric measure spaces and let $f:X\rightarrow Y$ be a Borel-measurable function for which there is some $y_0$ and some $p\geq 0$ such that $$ \int_{x\in X}\,d(y_0,f(x)...
ABIM's user avatar
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1 vote
0 answers
112 views

What is the topological characteristic of a separable metric space $X$ such that $|kX\setminus X|=\frak{c}$ for any completion $kX$ of $X$?

What is the topological characteristic of a separable metric space $X$ such that $|kX\setminus X|=\frak{c}$ for any completion $kX$ of $X$?
Alexander Osipov's user avatar
9 votes
1 answer
311 views

Continuously varying norms

Let $V$ be a finite-dimensional real vector space with its Euclidean topology. Then all norms on $V$ are equivalent and consequently given two norms $\lVert-\rVert$, $\lVert-\rVert'$, the number $$ d =...
Jakob Werner's user avatar
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16 votes
5 answers
903 views

Which metric spaces have this superposition property?

Let $A \subset X$ and $B \subset X$ be two isometric subsets of a metric space $X$. So there is an isometry $f: A \to B$. Say that a metric space $X$ has the superposition property (my terminology) ...
Joseph O'Rourke's user avatar
6 votes
1 answer
318 views

How complicated can the path component of a compact metric space be?

Let $X$ be a compact metric space and $P$ be a path component of $X$. Since we are not assuming $X$ is locally path connected, $P$ must need not be open nor closed. Certainly, $P$ must be separable ...
Jeremy Brazas's user avatar
2 votes
2 answers
163 views

Monotonicity of doubling dimension

Let $(X,d)$ be a metric space with finite Assouad dimension $0<C_X$. It seems intuitive to me that if $\emptyset \subset Y\subseteq X$ then $Y$ is also doubling and its Assouad dimension, denoted ...
SetValued_Michael's user avatar
1 vote
0 answers
97 views

Are Hölder functions between Banach spaces residual in the compact-open topology?

Let $X$ and $Y$ be Banach spaces and let $C(X,Y)$ be the set of continuous functions from $X$ to $Y$ equipped with the topology of uniform convergence on compact sets (i.e. the compact-open topology). ...
ABIM's user avatar
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7 votes
1 answer
195 views

Does there exist a countable metric space which is Lipschitz universal for all countable metric spaces?

Is there a countable metric space $U$ such that any countable metric space is bi-Lipschitz equivalent to a subset of $U$? How about $c_{00}(\mathbb{Q})$ where $\mathbb{Q}$ is the rational numbers? ...
Rui Liu's user avatar
  • 73
1 vote
0 answers
449 views

Bound on covering number of Lipschitz functions – missing part in proofs of Kolmogorov et al

Given a metric space $(\mathcal{X},\rho)$ and $\mathcal{A}\subset\mathcal{X}$ totally bounded, i.e. $\mathcal{A}$ has a finite $\varepsilon$-covering for any $\varepsilon>0$. Consider $\...
samuel's user avatar
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3 votes
0 answers
148 views

Topologically characterizing metrizable spaces

There are some well-known theorems that imply that some metrizable spaces, when satisfying other topological properties, are unique up to homeomorphism. Here are a few examples, where "perfect&...
aghostinthefigures's user avatar
2 votes
0 answers
135 views

Does a lifted functor on $\mathbf{1Met}$ preserve isometries?

Let $\mathbf{1Met}$ denote the category of metric spaces with distance bounded by $1$ and nonexpansive maps ($1$-Lipschitz functions). I call isometry a distance-preserving map (some people require it ...
ralphS16's user avatar
2 votes
0 answers
114 views

Why does the solution to pendulum problem with the geometric approach of Jacobi metric does not correspond to the solution with Lagrangian approach? [closed]

When we solve the pendulum problem with EL equation, we get to the differential equation $\ddot{q}+\frac{g}{l}\sin q=0$ but when I apply the substitution $t \rightarrow t\sqrt\frac{g}{l}$ and ...
Federica Sibilla's user avatar
3 votes
0 answers
177 views

When do Polish spaces admit complete metric making them $\mathrm{CAT}(\kappa)$?

Question $\DeclareMathOperator\CAT{CAT}$Let $X$ be a Polish space. When are there known conditions under which $X$'s topology can be metrized by a metric $d$ such that $(X,d)$ is a: $\CAT(\kappa)$ ...
Carlos_Petterson's user avatar
0 votes
0 answers
49 views

When can a compact metric space be covered by finitely many nearly-disjoint closed and convex sets?

This question is a follow-up of the following negative question. Let $(X,d)$ be a (non-empty) compact metric space. More generally than in the first post, I'll call a set of non-empty subsets $C_1,\...
ABIM's user avatar
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1 vote
1 answer
158 views

Effect of snowflaking on doubling constants

This question is related to this one. Let $(X,d)$ be a metric space, let $\epsilon\in [0,1)$ and consider the snowflake $(X,d^{1-\epsilon})$. Suppose that $(X,d)$ has a finite doubling constant, ...
ABIM's user avatar
  • 5,405
1 vote
1 answer
99 views

Lower bound on a norm of $\mathbb{CP}^2$ inducing a lower bound on the Euclidean norm of $\mathbb{C}^3$

Let $|\cdot|$ denote the usual Euclidean norm on $\mathbb{C}^3$ and fix some arbitrary metric $\rho$ on $\mathbb{CP}^2$. For $\delta > 0$ and any set $\hat{P} \subset \mathbb{CP}^2$, define the $\...
ithmath's user avatar
  • 53
0 votes
1 answer
189 views

Terminology "upper" Ahlfors regular measure

Let $(X,d)$ be a metric space and $m$ be a Borel measure on $(X,d)$. The measure $m$ is called Ahlors regular if $m(B(x,r))\asymp r^q$ for some $q>0$ and each $x\in X$. Is there a name for ...
ABIM's user avatar
  • 5,405
5 votes
1 answer
200 views

Criterion for Kuratowski Limit Inferior

Let $(X,d_X)$ be a compact metric space and let $\{K_n\}_{n=1}^{\infty}$ be a collection of non-empty compact subsets. Let $K\subseteq X$ be compact. Then, if for every $x_n \in K_n$ we have $$ d_X(...
SetValued_Michael's user avatar
2 votes
0 answers
93 views

Finite approximations to the Kuratowski/Fréchet embedding

Let $(X,d)$ be a compact doubling metric space with doubling constant $C>0$. Let $\{\mathbb{X}_n\}_{n=0}^{\infty}$ be a sequences of finite subsets of $X$ with $$ \left\{B\left(x_k,\frac1{n}\right)...
Carlos_Petterson's user avatar
5 votes
1 answer
168 views

Compactness of symmetric power of a compact space

Suppose I have a compact metric space $(X,d)$ and let $\mathcal{X}=X^K$ be the product space. Consider the equivalence relation $\sim$ on $\mathcal{X}$ given as: for $\alpha,\beta\in \mathcal{X}$, $\...
Sunrit's user avatar
  • 59
3 votes
0 answers
171 views

Covering number $C^k$-balls in $C(\mathbb{R}^n)$

Fix a positive integer $n$ and and an non-negative integer $k$. The Arzela-Ascoli theorem guarantees that for a given positive integer $k$ and a given $L>0$ the set $$ Ball_{C^{k,1}([0,1]^n)}(0,L) ...
ABIM's user avatar
  • 5,405
0 votes
0 answers
62 views

Terminology: maps which are bi-Lipschitz on compact subsets

Let $X$ and $Y$ be metric spaces and let $f:X\rightarrow Y$ be such that: for every compact subset $K$ of $X$ the restricted map $f|_K:K\rightarrow Y$ defined by $f|_K(x)=f(x)$ is bi-Lipschitz (with ...
ABIM's user avatar
  • 5,405
2 votes
0 answers
51 views

Smallest doubling subset of a set in a metric space

Let $(X,d)$ be a separable metric space and $A\subseteq X$ be compact. Since every finite set is doubling then, the collection $\mathcal{A}$ of doubling subsets of $A$ cannot be empty. My initial ...
Carlos_Petterson's user avatar
1 vote
0 answers
65 views

Are Carnot groups ever CAT(𝜅) spaces?

Let $G$ be a free Carnot group of homogeneous dimension $d$, equipped with the Carnot–Carathéodory metric. Is $(G,d)$ ever $\operatorname{CAT}(\kappa)$ for some $\kappa\in \mathbb{R}$?
Carlos_Petterson's user avatar
15 votes
3 answers
7k views

A metric for Grassmannians

I'm reading an article by Ricardo Mañé, "The Hausdorff dimension of horseshoes of diffeomorphisms of surfaces" (https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02585431). I'm having a technical problem. Sorry for ...
user avatar
2 votes
0 answers
102 views

What is the relationship between barycenters in the Arens-Eells sense and barycenters in the optimal transport sense

Setup: Let $X$ be a complete pointed metric space. Let us briefly recall that the Wasserstein space $W_1(X)$ is identifiable with a subset of the Arens-Eells (or Lipschitz-Free) space $\operatorname{...
ABIM's user avatar
  • 5,405
1 vote
0 answers
106 views

Best estimate on doubling constant of a finite metric space

Let $(X,d)$ be a finite metric space. Clearly, $(X,d)$ is a doubling metric space but is there a 'best' estimate of $(X,d)$'s doubling constant? Probability based on its cardinality, diameter, and ...
Carlos_Petterson's user avatar
3 votes
0 answers
80 views

String metric properties when extending strings

I am studying some aspects concerning string distance functions, and I am sure there are generic results available in the field of metric spaces, but I have not been able to find appropriate ...
Kikolo's user avatar
  • 91
18 votes
1 answer
901 views

How to compute the Gromov-Hausdorff distance between spheres $S_n$ and $S_m$?

Can we compute the Gromov-Hausdorff distance $d(\mathbb{S}_n,\mathbb{S}_m)$ for two different spheres $\mathbb{S}_n$ and $\mathbb{S}_m$, $m\neq n$? We consider the spheres with the metrics induced by ...
Hu xiyu's user avatar
  • 697
6 votes
2 answers
1k views

Is the separability of the space needed in the proof of the Prohorov's theorem?

The Section 5 of the book: Billingsley, P., Convergence of Probability Measures, 1999, studies Prohorov's theorem. A short reminder is given below. Let $\Pi$ be a family of probability measures on ...
Mark's user avatar
  • 657
18 votes
3 answers
7k views

Quotient of metric spaces

Let $(X,d)$ be a compact metric space and $\sim$ an equivalence relation on $X$ such that the quotient space $X/\sim$ is Hausdorff. It is well known that in this case the quotient is metrizable. My ...
burtonpeterj's user avatar
  • 1,769
4 votes
0 answers
114 views

Sufficient conditions for the Besicovitch covering theorem to hold on groups of polynomial growth

Let $G$ be a finitely generated group with symmetric generating set $S$. Then $S$ induces a distance $d$ on $G$ by letting $d(a,b) = $ the minimum $n$ such that there are generators $s_1,...,s_n$ with ...
MathidRyan's user avatar

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