Opentopia Directory Encyclopedia Tools

Intrinsic metric

Encyclopedia : I : IN : INT : Intrinsic metric


If two places are at a distance one mile from each other, it is reasonable to expect that it should be possible to construct a road of length one mile between them. Except, of course, if there's a lake in the way. In mathematics, the general notion of measuring distances is captured with abstract metric spaces. If in such a metric space the distance between any two points can be realized with a "road" of the same length, we call the metric space a length space and the metric intrinsic.

Definitions

Suppose (M, d) is a metric space. We define a new metric dl on M, known as the induced intrinsic metric, as follows: dl(x,y) is the infimum of the lengths of all paths from x to y. Here, a path from x to y is a continuous map γ : [0,1] → M with γ(0) = x and γ(1) = y. The length of such a path is defined as explained for rectifiable curves. We set dl(x, y) = ∞ if there is no path of finite length from x to y.

If d(x,y) = dl(x,y) for all points x and y in M, we say (M, d) is a length space or a path metric space and the metric d is intrinsic.

We say that the metric d has approximate midpoints if for any ε>0 and any pair of points x, y in M there exists c in M such that d(x,c) and d(c,y) are both smaller than d(x,y)/2 + ε.

Examples

Properties

In general, we have ddl and the topology defined by dl is therefore always coarser than or equal to the one defined by d.

The space (M, dl) is always a path metric space (with the caveat, as mentioned above, that dl can be infinite).

The metric of a length space has approximate midpoints. Conversely, every complete metric space with approximate midpoints is a length space.

The Hopf-Rinow theorem states that if a length space [(M,d)] is complete and locally compact then any two points in [M] can be connected by a minimizing geodesic and all bounded closed sets in [M] are compact.

References

 


From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.

Search Titles
0123456789
ABCDEFGHIJ
KLMNOPQRST
UVWXYZ?

E-mail this article to:

Personal Message: