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Fractals deal with special sets that exhibit complicated patterns in every scale. Fractal sets usually have a Hausdorff dimension different from its topological dimension. Examples include Julia sets, the Sierpinski triangle, the Cantor set. Fractals naturally appear in dynamical system, such as iterations in the complex plane, or as strange attractors to continuous dynamical systems, (see Lorentz attractor).

9 votes
1 answer
368 views

Box dimension of the set of Pisot numbers?

A Pisot number is an algebraic integer bigger than $1$ with all of its Galois conjugates having modulus less than $1$. The set of Pisot numbers is known to be countably infinite and is not dense in $ …
Bill Mance's user avatar
4 votes
0 answers
172 views

Possible Hausdorff dimension of intersection of Besicovitch-Eggleston like sets

Let $b \geq 2$ be an integer and suppose that $v=(p_0,\cdots,p_{b-1})$ be a probability vector. Let $S_{b,v}$ be the set of real numbers whose $b$-ary expansion has the digit $k$ with relative frequen …
Bill Mance's user avatar
5 votes
1 answer
193 views

Is there a survey of recent work relating to the Hausdorff dimension of sets defined through...

I am familiar with the work of Helmut Cajar, but his book is thirty years old and it's clear that there has been substantial progress since then. I have been spending a lot of time looking through ma …
Bill Mance's user avatar