Natural pseudodistance
In size theory, the natural pseudodistance between two size pairs ,
is the value
, where
varies in the set of all homeomorphisms from the manifold
to the manifold
and
is the supremum norm. If
and
are not homeomorphic, then the natural pseudodistance is defined to be
.
It is usually assumed that
,
are
closed manifolds and the measuring functions
are
. Put another way, the natural pseudodistance measures the infimum of the change of the measuring function induced by the homeomorphisms from
to
.
The concept of natural pseudodistance can be easily extended to size pairs where the measuring function takes values in
.[1]
Main properties
It can be proved [2]
that the natural pseudodistance always equals the Euclidean distance between two critical values of the measuring functions (possibly, of the same measuring function) divided by a suitable positive integer .
If
and
are surfaces, the number
can be assumed to be
,
or
.[3] If
and
are curves, the number
can be assumed to be
or
.[4]
If an optimal homeomorphism
exists (i.e.,
), then
can be assumed to be
.[2]
See also
References
- ↑ Patrizio Frosini, Michele Mulazzani, Size homotopy groups for computation of natural size distances, Bulletin of the Belgian Mathematical Society, 6:455-464, 1999.
- 1 2 Pietro Donatini, Patrizio Frosini, Natural pseudodistances between closed manifolds, Forum Mathematicum, 16(5):695-715, 2004.
- ↑ Pietro Donatini, Patrizio Frosini, Natural pseudodistances between closed surfaces, Journal of the European Mathematical Society, 9(2):231–253, 2007.
- ↑ Pietro Donatini, Patrizio Frosini, Natural pseudodistances between closed curves, Forum Mathematicum, 21(6):981–999, 2009.